The ObjectFileYAML.roundTrip serializes a default-constructed
NormalizedFile to YAML, triggering uninitialized memory reads.
While there use in-class member initializers.
llvm-svn: 240446
None of the implementations replace the SimpleFile with some other file,
they just modify the SimpleFile in-place, so a direct reference to the
file is sufficient.
llvm-svn: 240167
loadFile could load mulitple files just because yaml has a feature for
putting multiple documents in one file.
Designing a linker around what yaml can do seems like a bad idea to
me. This patch changes it to read a single file.
There are further improvements to be done to the api and they
will follow shortly.
llvm-svn: 235724
The function took either StringRef or Twine. Since string literals are
ambiguous when resolving the overloading, many code calls used this
function with explicit type conversion. That led awkward code like
make_dynamic_error_code(Twine("Error occurred")).
This patch adds a function definition for string literals, so that
you can directly call the function with literals.
llvm-svn: 234841
I believe this patch eliminates all remaining uses of _context
or _linkingContext variable names. Consistent naming improves
readability.
llvm-svn: 234645
atom_collection is basically a wrapper for std::vector. The class
provides begin and end member functions, so that it "hides" the
other member functions provided by std::vector. However, you can
still directly access _atoms member since the member is not
protected.
We cannot simply make the member private because we need that member
when we are constructing atom vectors.
This patch splits atom_collection into two types: std::vector<Atom *>
and AtomRange. When we are constructing atom vectors, we use the
former class. We return instances of the latter class from File
objects so that callers cannot add or remove atoms from the lists.
std::vector<Atom *> is automatically converted to AtomRange.
llvm-svn: 234450
canParse took three parameters -- file magic, filename extension and
memory buffer. All but YAMLReader ignored the second parameter.
This patch removes the parameter.
llvm-svn: 234080
This patch defines implicit conversion between integers and PowerOf2
instances, so uses of the classes is now implicit and look like
regular integers. Now we are ready to remove the scaffolding.
llvm-svn: 233245
The new constructor's type is the same, but this one takes not a log2
value but an alignment value itself, so the meaning is totally differnet.
llvm-svn: 233244
This patch is to make instantiation and conversion to an integer explicit,
so that we can mechanically replace all occurrences of the class with
integer in the next step.
Now get() returns an alignment value rather than its log2 value.
llvm-svn: 233242
We are using log2 values and values themselves to represent alignments.
For example, alignment 8 is sometimes represented as 3 (8 == 2^3).
We want to stop using log2 values.
Because both types are regular arithmetic types, we cannot get help from
a compiler to find places we mix two representations. That makes this
merging work surprisingly hard because if I make a mistake, I'll just get
wrong results at runtime (Yay types!). In this patch, I introduced
a class to represents power-of-two values, which is basically an alias
for an integer type.
Once the migration is done, the class will be removed.
llvm-svn: 233232
Handle resolution of symbols coming from linked object files lazily.
Add implementation of handling _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ and __exidx_start/_end symbols for ARM platform.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8159
llvm-svn: 232261
File objects are not really const in the resolver. We set ordinals to
them and call beforeLink hooks. Also, File's member functions marked
as const are not really const. ArchiveFile never returns the same
member file twice, so it remembers files returned before. find() has
side effects.
In order to deal with the inconsistencies, we sprinkled const_casts
and marked member varaibles as mutable.
This patch removes const from there to reflect the reality.
llvm-svn: 231212
The round-trip passes were introduced in r193300. The intention of
the change was to make sure that LLD is capable of reading end
writing such file formats.
But that turned out to be yet another over-designed stuff that had
been slowing down everyday development.
The passes ran after the core linker and before the writer. If you
had an additional piece of information that needs to be passed from
front-end to the writer, you had to invent a way to save the data to
YAML/Native. These passes forced us to do that even if that data
was not needed to be represented neither in an object file nor in
an executable/DSO. It doesn't make sense. We don't need these passes.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7480
llvm-svn: 230069
Summary:
Define an explicit type for arch specific reference kind and use it in switch statement to make the compiler emit warnings if some case is not cover.
It will help to catch such errors when we add new mach-o reference kind.
Reviewers: shankarke, kledzik
Reviewed By: shankarke
Subscribers: shankarke, aemerson, llvm-commits
Projects: #lld
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7612
llvm-svn: 229246
The real user of the LayoutPass is now only Mach-O, so move that
pass out of the common directory to Mach-O directory.
"Core" architecture were using the LayoutPass. I modified that
to use a simple OrderPass. I think no one actually have authority
what feature should be in Core and what's not, but I believe the
LayoutPass is not very suitable for Core. Before more code starts
depending on the complex pass, it's better to remove that from
Core.
I could have simplified that pass because Mach-O is the only user
of the LayoutPass. For example, the second parameter of the
LayoutPass constructor can be converted from optional to mandatory.
I didn't do that in this patch to keep it simple. I'll do in a
followup patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7311
llvm-svn: 228341
lldELF is used by each ELF backend. lldELF's ELFLinkingContext
also held a reference to each backend, creating a link-time
cycle. This patch moves the backend references to lldDriver.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7119
llvm-svn: 226976
Moved getMemoryBuffer from DarwnLdDriver to MachOLinkingContext.
lldMachO shared library target now builds.
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7155
llvm-svn: 226963
lldELF is used by each ELF backend. lldELF's ELFLinkingContext
also held a reference to each backend, creating a link-time
cycle. This patch moves the backend references to lldDriver.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7119
llvm-svn: 226922
Before this patch there was a cyclic dependency between lldCore and
lldReaderWriter. Only lldConfig could be built as a shared library.
* Moved Reader and Writer base classes into lldCore.
* The following shared libraries can now be built:
lldCore
lldYAML
lldNative
lldPasses
lldReaderWriter
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7105
From: Greg Fitzgerald <garious@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 226732
The previous default behavior of LLD is --as-needed. LLD linked
against a DSO only if the DSO file was actually used to link an
executable (i.e. at least one symbol was resolved using the shared
library file.)
In this patch I added a boolean flag to FileNode for --as-needed.
I also added an accessor to DSO name to shared library file class.
llvm-svn: 226274
InputElement was named that because it's an element of an InputGraph.
It's losing the origin because the InputGraph is now being removed.
InputElement's subclass is FileNode, that naming inconsistency needed
to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 226147
These changes depended on r225674 and had been rolled back in r225859.
Because r225674 has been re-submitted, it's safe to re-submit them.
llvm-svn: 226132
The original commit had an issue with Mac OS dylib files. It didn't
handle fat binary dylib files correctly. This patch includes a fix.
A test for that case has already been committed in r225764.
llvm-svn: 226123
This is just a mechanical cleanup, no functionality changed. This just
fixes very minor inconsistencies with how #include lines were spaced and
sorted in LLD.
llvm-svn: 225978
r225764 broke a basic functionality on Mac OS. This change reverts
r225764, r225766, r225767, r225769, r225814, r225816, r225829, and r225832.
llvm-svn: 225859
Summary:
Fix the binary file reader to properly read dyld version info.
Update the install_name test case to properly test the binary reader. We can't use '-print_atoms' as the output format is 'native' yaml and it does not contains the dyld current and compatibility versions.
Also change the timestamp value of LD_ID_DYLD to match the one generated by ld64.
The dynamic linker (dyld) used to expects different values for timestamp in LD_ID_DYLD and LD_LOAD_DYLD for prebound images. While prebinding is deprecated, we should probably keep it safe and match ld64.
Reviewers: kledzik
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Projects: #lld
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6736
llvm-svn: 224681
Summary:
Work on adding -rpath support to the mach-o linker.
This patch is based on the ld64 behavior for the command line option validation.
It includes a basic test to check that the LC_RPATH load commands are properly generated when that option is used.
It also add LC_RPATH support to the binary reader, but I don't know how to test it though.
Reviewers: kledzik
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Projects: #lld
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6724
llvm-svn: 224544
The documentation of parseFile() said that "the resulting File
object may take ownership of the MemoryBuffer." So, whether or not
the ownership of a MemoryBuffer would be taken was not clear.
A FileNode (a subclass of InputElement, which is being deprecated)
keeps the ownership if a File doesn't take it.
This patch makes File always take the ownership of a buffer.
Buffers lifespan is not always the same as File instances.
Files are able to deallocate buffers after parsing the contents.
llvm-svn: 224113
This is a second patch for InputGraph cleanup.
Sorry about the size of the patch, but what I did in this
patch is basically moving code from constructor to a new
method, parse(), so the amount of new code is small.
This has no change in functionality.
We've discussed the issue that we have too many classes
to represent a concept of "file". We have File subclasses
that represent files read from disk. In addition to that,
we have bunch of InputElement subclasses (that are part
of InputGraph) that represent command line arguments for
input file names. InputElement is a wrapper for File.
InputElement has parseFile method. The method instantiates
a File. The File's constructor reads a file from disk and
parses that.
Because parseFile method is called from multiple worker
threads, file parsing is processed in parallel. In other
words, one reason why we needed the wrapper classes is
because a File would start reading a file as soon as it
is instantiated.
So, the reason why we have too many classes here is at
least partly because of the design flaw of File class.
Just like threads in a good threading library, we need
to separate instantiation from "start" method, so that
we can instantiate File objects when we need them (which
should be very fast because it involves only one mmap()
and no real file IO) and use them directly instead of
the wrapper classes. Later, we call parse() on each
file in parallel to let them do actual file IO.
In this design, we can eliminate a reason to have the
wrapper classes.
In order to minimize the size of the patch, I didn't go so
far as to replace the wrapper classes with File classes.
The wrapper classes are still there.
In this patch, we call parse() immediately after
instantiating a File, so this really has no change in
functionality. Eventually the call of parse() should be
moved to Driver::link(). That'll be done in another patch.
llvm-svn: 224102
This reverts commit r223330 because it broke Darwin and ELF
linkers in a way that we couldn't have caught with the existing
test cases.
llvm-svn: 223373
The aim of this patch is to reduce the excessive abstraction from
the InputGraph. We found that even a simple thing, such as sorting
input files (Mach-O) or adding a new file to the input file list
(PE/COFF), is nearly impossible with the InputGraph abstraction,
because it hides too much information behind it. As a result,
we invented complex interactions between components (e.g.
notifyProgress() mechanism) and tricky code to work around that
limitation. There were many occasions that we needed to write
awkward code.
This patch is a first step to make it cleaner. As a first step,
this removes Group class from the InputGraph. The grouping feature
is now directly handled by the Resolver. notifyProgress is removed
since we no longer need that. I could have cleaned it up even more,
but in order to keep the patch minimum, I focused on Group.
SimpleFileNode class, a container of File objects, is now limited
to have only one File. We shold have done this earlier.
We used to allow putting multiple File objects to FileNode.
Although SimpleFileNode usually has only one file, the Driver class
actually used that capability. I modified the Driver class a bit,
so that one FileNode is created for each input File.
We should now probably remove SimpleFileNode and directly store
File objects to the InputGraph in some way, because a container
that can contain only one object is useless. This is a TODO.
Mach-O input files are now sorted before they are passe to the
Resolver. DarwinInputGraph class is no longer needed, so removed.
PECOFF still has hacky code to add a new file to the input file list.
This will be cleaned up in another patch.
llvm-svn: 223330
In PR21682 Jean-Daliel Dupas found a leak in the trie builder and suggested
a fix was to use a list instead of SmallVector so that the list elements
could be allocated in the BumpPtrAllocator.
llvm-svn: 223104
Mach-o does not use a simple SO_NEEDED to track dependent dylibs. Instead,
the linker copies four things from each dylib to each client: the runtime path
(aka "install name"), the build time, current version (dylib build number), and
compatibility version The build time is no longer used (it cause every rebuild
of a dylib to be different). The compatibility version is usually just 1.0
and never changes, or the dylib becomes incompatible.
This patch copies that information into the NormalizedMachO format and
propagates it to clients.
llvm-svn: 222300
This patch fixes the following MSVC warning.
warning C4334: '<<' : result of 32-bit shift implicitly
converted to 64 bits (was 64-bit shift intended?)
llvm-svn: 222293
When fixing up BL instructions, the linker has to compare the thumbness of the
target to decide if the instruction needs to be converted to BLX. But with B
instruction there is no BX, so the linker asserts if the target is not the
same thumbness. This assert was firing in -r mode when the target was undefined
which it interpreted as being non-thumb.
Test case change is to add a B (in both thumb and arm code) to an undefined
symbol and round trip through -r mode.
llvm-svn: 222266