My recent commits separated symbol resolution from the symbol table,
so the functions to resolve symbols are now in a somewhat wrong file.
This patch moves it to Symbols.cpp.
The functions are now member functions of the symbol.
This is code move change. I modified function names so that they are
appropriate as member functions, though. No functionality change
intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62290
llvm-svn: 361474
--{start,end}-lib give files grouped by the options the archive file
semantics. That is, each object file between them acts as if it were
in an archive file whose sole member is the file.
Therefore, files between --{start,end}-lib are linked to the final
output only if they are needed to resolve some undefined symbols.
Previously, the feature was implemented this way:
1. We read a symbol table and insert defined symbols to the symbol
table as lazy symbols.
2. If an undefind symbol is resolved to a lazy symbol, that lazy
symbol instantiate ObjFile class for that symbol, which re-insert
all defined symbols to the symbol table.
So, if an ObjFile is instantiated, defined symbols are inserted to the
symbol table twice. Since inserting long symbol names is not cheap,
there's a room to optimize here.
This patch optimzies it. Now, LazyObjFile remembers symbol handles and
passed them over to a new ObjFile instance, so that the ObjFile
doesn't insert the same strings.
Here is a quick benchmark to link clang. "Original" is the original
lld with unmodified command line options. For "Case 1" and "Case 2", I
extracted all files from archive files and replace .a's in a command
line with .o's wrapped with --{start,end}-lib. I used the original lld
for Case 1" and use this patch for Case 2.
Original: 5.892
Case 1: 6.001 (+1.8%)
Case 2: 5.701 (-3.2%)
So, interestingly, --{start,end}-lib are now faster than the regular
linking scheme with archive files. That's perhaps not too surprising,
though, because for regular archive files, we look up the symbol table
with the same string twice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62188
llvm-svn: 361473
This is a minor improvement inspired by https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38303.
A person reported that he observed message complaining about unsupported R_ARM_V4BX:
error: can't create dynamic relocation R_ARM_V4BX against local symbol in readonly segment; recompile object files with -fPIC
But with -z notext he only saw a relocation number, what is not convenient:
error: ../../gfx/cairo/libpixman/src/pixman-arm-neon-asm-bilinear.o:(.text+0x4F0): unrecognized reloc 40
Also, in the error messages we use relocation but not reloc.
With this patch we start to print one of the following messages:
error: file.o: unrecognized relocation Unknown(999)
error: file.o: unrecognized relocation R_X_KNOWN_BY_LLVM_BUT_UNSUPPORTED_BY_LLD_NAME
There is no way to write a test for that I believe.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62237
llvm-svn: 361472
Also renames it LinkerDriver::compileBitcodeFiles.
The function doesn't logically belong to SymbolTable. We added this
function to the symbol table because symbol table used to be a
container of input files. This is no longer the case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62291
llvm-svn: 361469
Symbol's NameSize is computed lazily. Currently, when we replace a symbol,
a cached length value can be discarded. This patch propagates that value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62234
llvm-svn: 361364
Rather than report "undefined symbol: ", give more informative message
about the object file that defines the discarded section.
In particular, PR41133, if the section is a discarded COMDAT, print the
section group signature and the object file with the prevailing
definition. This is useful to track down some ODR issues.
We need to
* add `uint32_t DiscardedSecIdx` to Undefined for this feature.
* make ComdatGroups public and change its type to DenseMap<CachedHashStringRef, const InputFile *>
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59649
llvm-svn: 361359
For memory5.test, ld.bfd appears to ignore `. += 0x2000;`, so the test was testing
a wrong behavior. After deleting the code added in rLLD336335, we match ld.bfd and thus fix PR41357.
PR37836 (memory4.test) seems to have been fixed by another change.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62177
llvm-svn: 361228
For a reference to a local symbol, ld.bfd and gold error if the symbol
is defined in a discarded section but accept it if the symbol is
undefined. This inconsistent behavior seems unnecessary for us (it
probably makes sense for them as they differentiate local/global
symbols, the error would mean more code).
Catch such errors. Symbol index 0 may be used by marker relocations,
e.g. R_*_NONE R_ARM_V4BX. Don't error on them.
The difference from D61563 (which caused msan failure) is we don't call
Sym.computeBinding() on local symbols - VersionId is uninitialized.
llvm-svn: 361213
This patch is a fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41804.
We try to solve the precedence of user-specified symbol ordering file and C3 ordering provided as call graph. It deals with two case:
(1) When both --symbol-ordering-file=<file> and --call-graph-order-file=<file> are present, whichever flag comes later will take precedence.
(2) When only --symbol-ordering-file=<file> is present, it takes precedence over implicit call graph (CGProfile) generated by CGProfilePass enabled in new pass manager.
llvm-svn: 361190
We currently sort dynamic relocations by (!is_relative,symbol_index).
Add r_offset as the third key. This makes `readelf -r` debugging easier
(relocations to the same symbol are ordered by r_offset).
Refactor the test combreloc.s (renamed from combrelocs.s) to check
R_X86_64_RELATIVE, and delete --expand-relocs.
The difference from the reverted D61477 is that we keep !is_relative as
the first key. In local dynamic TLS model, DTPMOD (e.g.
R_ARM_TLS_DTPMOD32 R_X86_64_DTPMOD and R_PPC{,64}_DTPMOD) may use 0 as
the symbol index.
Reviewed By: grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62141
llvm-svn: 361164
This reverts commit r361144. It causes a use-of-uninitialized-value in
maybeReportUndefined at llvm/tools/lld/ELF/Relocations.cpp:682, as
detected by MemorySanitizer when local-undefined-symbol.s test is run.
llvm-svn: 361162
This reverts commit r361125. This linker change breaks shared libraries
in some subtle way on x86_64. (Specifically, gold segfaults when
loading the LLVMgold.so plugin linked with lldb with this patch.)
llvm-svn: 361150
For R_TLS:
1) Delete Sym.isTls() . The assembler ensures the symbol is STT_TLS.
If not (the input is broken), we would crash (dereferencing null Out::TlsPhdr).
2) Change Sym.isUndefWeak() to Sym.isUndefined(), otherwise with --noinhibit-exec
we would still evaluate the symbol and crash.
3) Return A if the symbol is undefined. This is PR40570.
The case is probably unrealistic but returning A matches R_ABS and the
behavior of several dynamic loaders.
R_NEG_TLS is obsoleted Sun TLS we don't fully support, but
R_RELAX_TLS_GD_TO_LE_NEG is still used by GD->LE relaxation (subl $var@tpoff,%eax).
They should add the addend. Unfortunately I can't test it as compilers don't seem to generate non-zero implicit addends.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62098
llvm-svn: 361146
For a reference to a local symbol, ld.bfd and gold error if the symbol
is defined in a discarded section but accept it if the symbol is
undefined. This inconsistent behavior seems unnecessary for us (it
probably makes sense for them as they differentiate local/global
symbols, the error would mean more code).
Weaken the condition to getSymbol(Config->IsMips64EL) == 0 to catch such
errors. The symbol index can be 0 (e.g. R_*_NONE R_ARM_V4BX) and we shouldn't error on them.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61563
llvm-svn: 361144
Fixes PR41692.
We currently sort dynamic relocations by (!is_relative,symbol_index).
Change it to (symbol_index,r_offset). We still place relative
relocations first because R_*_RELATIVE are the only dynamic relocations
with 0 symbol index (except on MIPS, which doesn't use DT_REL[A]COUNT
anyway).
This makes `readelf -r` debugging easier (relocations to the same symbol
are ordered by r_offset).
Refactor the test combreloc.s (renamed from combrelocs.s) to check
R_X86_64_RELATIVE, and delete --expand-relocs.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61477
llvm-svn: 361125
This is a mechanical rewrite of replaceSymbol(A, B) to A->replace(B).
I also added a comment to Symbol::replace().
Technically this change is not necessary, but this change makes code a
bit more concise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62117
llvm-svn: 361123
Otherwise, we may set IsPreemptible (e.g. --dynamic-list) then clear it
(in replaceCommonSymbols()).
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62107
llvm-svn: 361122
This reverts D53906.
D53906 increased p_align of PT_TLS on ARM/AArch64 to 32/64 to make the
static TLS layout compatible with Android Bionic's ELF TLS. However,
this may cause glibc ARM/AArch64 programs to crash (see PR41527).
The faulty PT_TLS in the executable satisfies p_vaddr%p_align != 0. The
remainder is normally 0 but may be non-zero with the hack in place. The
problem is that we increase PT_TLS's p_align after OutputSections'
addresses are fixed (assignAddress()). It is possible that
p_vaddr%old_p_align = 0 while p_vaddr%new_p_align != 0.
For a thread local variable defined in the executable, lld computed TLS
offset (local exec) is different from glibc computed TLS offset from
another module (initial exec/generic dynamic). Note: PR41527 said the
bug affects initial exec but actually generic dynamic is affected as
well.
(glibc is correct in that it compute offsets that satisfy
`offset%p_align == p_vaddr%p_align`, which is a basic ELF requirement.
This hack appears to work on FreeBSD rtld, musl<=1.1.22, and Bionic, but
that is just because they (and lld) incorrectly compute offsets that
satisfy `offset%p_align = 0` instead.)
Android developers are fine to revert this patch, carry this patch in
their tree before figuring out a long-term solution (e.g. a dummy .tdata
with sh_addralign=64 sh_size={0,1} in crtbegin*.o files. The overhead is
now insignificant after D62059).
Reviewed By: rprichard, srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62055
llvm-svn: 361090
After D62059, we don't align p_memsz of PT_TLS to p_align. The
getRelocTargetVA formula should align it instead.
It becomes clear that R_NEG_TLS and R_TLS are opposite from each other.
In i386-tls-le-align.s, I put ret after call ___tls_get_addr@plt as
otherwise ld.bfd would reject the relaxation:
TLS transition from R_386_TLS_GD to R_386_TLS_LE_32 against `a' at 0x3 in section `.text' failed
llvm-svn: 361088
As Ryan Prichard pointed out, after D62059, the TP offset is incorrect.
Add x86-64-tls-le-align.s to check this. Better formulae for both
variants should take p_vaddr%p_align into account (offset%p_align =
p_vaddr%p_align is a basic ELF requirement), but I can't find a way to
test the behavior.
llvm-svn: 361084
On Elf*_Rel targets, for a relocation to a section symbol, an R_ABS is
added which will be used by relocateOne() to compute the implicit
addend.
Addends of R_*_NONE should be ignored, so don't emit an R_ABS.
This fixes crashes on X86 and ARM because their relocateOne() do not
handle R_*_NONE.
Reviewed By: peter.smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62052
llvm-svn: 361036
The code was added in r252352, probably to address some layout issues.
Actually PT_TLS's p_memsz doesn't need to be aligned on either variant.
ld.bfd doesn't do that.
In case of larger alignment (e.g. 64 for Android Bionic on AArch64, see
D62055), this may make the overhead smaller.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62059
llvm-svn: 361029
This patch implements a limited form of autolinking primarily designed to allow
either the --dependent-library compiler option, or "comment lib" pragmas (
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/preprocessor/comment-c-cpp?view=vs-2017) in
C/C++ e.g. #pragma comment(lib, "foo"), to cause an ELF linker to automatically
add the specified library to the link when processing the input file generated
by the compiler.
Currently this extension is unique to LLVM and LLD. However, care has been taken
to design this feature so that it could be supported by other ELF linkers.
The design goals were to provide:
- A simple linking model for developers to reason about.
- The ability to to override autolinking from the linker command line.
- Source code compatibility, where possible, with "comment lib" pragmas in other
environments (MSVC in particular).
Dependent library support is implemented differently for ELF platforms than on
the other platforms. Primarily this difference is that on ELF we pass the
dependent library specifiers directly to the linker without manipulating them.
This is in contrast to other platforms where they are mapped to a specific
linker option by the compiler. This difference is a result of the greater
variety of ELF linkers and the fact that ELF linkers tend to handle libraries in
a more complicated fashion than on other platforms. This forces us to defer
handling the specifiers to the linker.
In order to achieve a level of source code compatibility with other platforms
we have restricted this feature to work with libraries that meet the following
"reasonable" requirements:
1. There are no competing defined symbols in a given set of libraries, or
if they exist, the program owner doesn't care which is linked to their
program.
2. There may be circular dependencies between libraries.
The binary representation is a mergeable string section (SHF_MERGE,
SHF_STRINGS), called .deplibs, with custom type SHT_LLVM_DEPENDENT_LIBRARIES
(0x6fff4c04). The compiler forms this section by concatenating the arguments of
the "comment lib" pragmas and --dependent-library options in the order they are
encountered. Partial (-r, -Ur) links are handled by concatenating .deplibs
sections with the normal mergeable string section rules. As an example, #pragma
comment(lib, "foo") would result in:
.section ".deplibs","MS",@llvm_dependent_libraries,1
.asciz "foo"
For LTO, equivalent information to the contents of a the .deplibs section can be
retrieved by the LLD for bitcode input files.
LLD processes the dependent library specifiers in the following way:
1. Dependent libraries which are found from the specifiers in .deplibs sections
of relocatable object files are added when the linker decides to include that
file (which could itself be in a library) in the link. Dependent libraries
behave as if they were appended to the command line after all other options. As
a consequence the set of dependent libraries are searched last to resolve
symbols.
2. It is an error if a file cannot be found for a given specifier.
3. Any command line options in effect at the end of the command line parsing apply
to the dependent libraries, e.g. --whole-archive.
4. The linker tries to add a library or relocatable object file from each of the
strings in a .deplibs section by; first, handling the string as if it was
specified on the command line; second, by looking for the string in each of the
library search paths in turn; third, by looking for a lib<string>.a or
lib<string>.so (depending on the current mode of the linker) in each of the
library search paths.
5. A new command line option --no-dependent-libraries tells LLD to ignore the
dependent libraries.
Rationale for the above points:
1. Adding the dependent libraries last makes the process simple to understand
from a developers perspective. All linkers are able to implement this scheme.
2. Error-ing for libraries that are not found seems like better behavior than
failing the link during symbol resolution.
3. It seems useful for the user to be able to apply command line options which
will affect all of the dependent libraries. There is a potential problem of
surprise for developers, who might not realize that these options would apply
to these "invisible" input files; however, despite the potential for surprise,
this is easy for developers to reason about and gives developers the control
that they may require.
4. This algorithm takes into account all of the different ways that ELF linkers
find input files. The different search methods are tried by the linker in most
obvious to least obvious order.
5. I considered adding finer grained control over which dependent libraries were
ignored (e.g. MSVC has /nodefaultlib:<library>); however, I concluded that this
is not necessary: if finer control is required developers can fall back to using
the command line directly.
RFC thread: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-March/131004.html.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60274
llvm-svn: 360984
This is the last patch of the series of patches to make it possible to
resolve symbols without asking SymbolTable to do so.
The main point of this patch is the introduction of
`elf::resolveSymbol(Symbol *Old, Symbol *New)`. That function resolves
or merges given symbols by examining symbol types and call
replaceSymbol (which memcpy's New to Old) if necessary.
With the new function, we have now separated symbol resolution from
symbol lookup. If you already have a Symbol pointer, you can directly
resolve the symbol without asking SymbolTable to do that.
Now that the nice abstraction become available, I can start working on
performance improvement of the linker. As a starter, I'm thinking of
making --{start,end}-lib faster.
--{start,end}-lib is currently unnecessarily slow because it looks up
the symbol table twice for each symbol.
- The first hash table lookup/insertion occurs when we instantiate a
LazyObject file to insert LazyObject symbols.
- The second hash table lookup/insertion occurs when we create an
ObjFile from LazyObject file. That overwrites LazyObject symbols
with Defined symbols.
I think it is not too hard to see how we can now eliminate the second
hash table lookup. We can keep LazyObject symbols in Step 1, and then
call elf::resolveSymbol() to do Step 2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61898
llvm-svn: 360975
The change broke some scenarios where debug information is still
needed, although MarkLive cannot see it, including the
Chromium/Android build. Reverting to unbreak that build.
llvm-svn: 360955
Module IDs can appear in diagnostic messages.
This patch adds some auxiliary symbols to improve their readability.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61857
llvm-svn: 360858
Previously, we handled common symbols as a kind of Defined symbol,
but what we were doing for common symbols is pretty different from
regular defined symbols.
Common symbol and defined symbol are probably as different as shared
symbol and defined symbols are different.
This patch introduces CommonSymbol to represent common symbols.
After symbols are resolved, they are converted to Defined symbols
residing in a .bss section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61895
llvm-svn: 360841
SymbolTable's add-family functions have lots of parameters because
when they have to create a new symbol, they forward given arguments
to Symbol's constructors. Therefore, the functions take at least as
many arguments as their corresponding constructors.
This patch simplifies the add-family functions. Now, the functions
take a symbol instead of arguments to construct a symbol. If there's
no existing symbol, a given symbol is memcpy'ed to the symbol table.
Otherwise, the functions attempt to merge the existing and a given
new symbol.
I also eliminated `CanOmitFromDynSym` parameter, so that the functions
take really one argument.
Symbol classes are trivially constructible, so looks like constructing
them to pass to add-family functions is as cheap as passing a lot of
arguments to the functions. A quick benchmark showed that this patch
seems performance-neutral.
This is a preparation for
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131902.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61855
llvm-svn: 360838
Patch by Mark Johnston!
Summary:
When the option is configured, ifunc calls do not go through the PLT;
rather, they appear as regular function calls with relocations
referencing the ifunc symbol, and the resolver is invoked when
applying the relocation. This is intended for use in freestanding
environments where text relocations are permissible and is incompatible
with the -z text option. The option is motivated by ifunc usage in the
FreeBSD kernel, where ifuncs are used to elide CPU feature flag bit
checks in hot paths. Instead of replacing the cost of a branch with that
of an indirect function call, the -z ifunc-noplt option is used to ensure
that ifunc calls carry no hidden overhead relative to normal function
calls.
Test Plan:
I added a couple of regression tests and tested the FreeBSD kernel
build using the latest lld sources.
To demonstrate the effects of the change, I used a micro-benchmark
which results in frequent invocations of a FreeBSD kernel ifunc. The
benchmark was run with and without IBRS enabled, and with and without
-zifunc-noplt configured. The observed speedup is small and consistent,
and is significantly larger with IBRS enabled:
https://people.freebsd.org/~markj/ifunc-noplt/noibrs.txthttps://people.freebsd.org/~markj/ifunc-noplt/ibrs.txt
Reviewed By: ruiu, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61613
llvm-svn: 360685
See D61891: llvm had a bug that might create invalid (DW_AT_low_pc,DW_AT_high_pc) pairs or range list entries due to missing DW_AT_addr_base.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61889
llvm-svn: 360679
The symbol table used to be a container of vectors of input files,
but that's no longer the case because the vectors are moved out of
SymbolTable and are now global variables.
Therefore, addFile doesn't have to belong to any class. This patch
moves the function out of the class.
This patch is a preparation for my RFC [1].
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131902.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61854
llvm-svn: 360666
The -n (--nmagic) disables page alignment, and acts as a -Bstatic
The -N (--omagic) does what -n does but also marks the executable segment as
writeable. As page alignment is disabled headers are not allocated unless
explicit in the linker script.
To disable page alignment in LLD we choose to set the page sizes to 1 so
that any alignment based on the page size does nothing. To set the
Target->PageSize to 1 we implement -z common-page-size, which has the side
effect of allowing the user to set the value as well.
Setting the page alignments to 1 does mean that any use of
CONSTANT(MAXPAGESIZE) or CONSTANT(COMMONPAGESIZE) in a linker script will
return 1, unlike in ld.bfd. However given that -n and -N disable paging
these probably shouldn't be used in a linker script where -n or -N is in
use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61688
llvm-svn: 360593
Suggested by Sean Fertile and Peter Smith.
Thunk section spacing decrease the total number of thunks. I measured a
decrease of 1% or less in some large programs, with no perceivable
slowdown in link time. Override getThunkSectionSpacing() to enable it.
0x2000000 is the farthest point R_PPC64_REL24 can reach. I tried several
numbers and found 0x2000000 works the best. Numbers near 0x2000000 work
as well but let's just use the simpler number.
As demonstrated by the updated tests, this essentially changes placement
of most thunks to the end of the output section. We leverage this
property to fix PR40740 reported by Alfredo Dal'Ava Júnior:
The output section .init consists of input sections from several object
files (crti.o crtbegin.o crtend.o crtn.o). Sections other than the last
one do not have a terminator. With this patch, we create the thunk after
the last .init input section and thus fix the issue. This is not
foolproof but works quite well for such sections (with no terminator) in
practice.
Reviewed By: ruiu, sfertile
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61720
llvm-svn: 360405
for (InputFile *F : Files)
Symtab->addFile<ELFT>(F); // if there is a duplicate symbol error
...
Target = getTarget();
When parsing .debug_info in the object file (for better diagnostics),
DWARF.cpp findAux may dereference the null pointer Target
auto *DR = dyn_cast<Defined>(&File->getRelocTargetSym(Rel));
if (!DR) {
// Broken debug info may point to a non-defined symbol,
// some asan object files may also contain R_X86_64_NONE
RelType Type = Rel.getType(Config->IsMips64EL);
if (Type != Target->NoneRel) /// Target is null
Move the assignment of Target to an earlier place to fix this.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61712
llvm-svn: 360305
Use `ld` and `daddiu` instructions in MIPS64 PLT records. That fixes a
segmentation fault.
Patch by Qiao Pengcheng.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61586
llvm-svn: 360187
For lld-link, unknown '/'-style flags are treated as filenames on POSIX
systems, so only '-'-style flags get typo correction for now. This
matches clang-cl.
PR37006.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61443
llvm-svn: 360145
It makes the --plugin-opt=obj-path= and --plugin-opt=thinlto-index-only=
behavior more consistent - the files will be created in the
BitcodeFiles.empty() case, but I assume whether it behaves this way is
not required by anyone.
LTOObj->run() cannot run with empty BitcodeFiles. There would be an error:
ld.lld: error: No available targets are compatible with triple ""
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61635
llvm-svn: 360129
This is based on D54720 by Sean Fertile.
When accessing a global symbol which is not defined in the translation unit,
compilers will generate instructions that load the address from the toc entry.
If the symbol is defined, non-preemptable, and addressable with a 32-bit
signed offset from the toc pointer, the address can be computed
directly. e.g.
addis 3, 2, .LC0@toc@ha # R_PPC64_TOC16_HA
ld 3, .LC0@toc@l(3) # R_PPC64_TOC16_LO_DS, load the address from a .toc entry
ld/lwa 3, 0(3) # load the value from the address
.section .toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC0: .tc var[TC],var
can be relaxed to
addis 3,2,var@toc@ha # this may be relaxed to a nop,
addi 3,3,var@toc@l # then this becomes addi 3,2,var@toc
ld/lwa 3, 0(3) # load the value from the address
We can delete the test ppc64-got-indirect.s as its purpose is covered by
newly added ppc64-toc-relax.s and ppc64-toc-relax-constants.s
Reviewed By: ruiu, sfertile
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60958
llvm-svn: 360112
Summary:
While the generic ABI requires notes to be 8-byte aligned in ELF64, many
vendor-specific notes (from Linux, NetBSD, Solaris, etc) use 4-byte
alignment.
In a PT_NOTE segment, if 4-byte aligned notes are followed by an 8-byte
aligned note, the possible 4-byte padding may make consumers fail to
parse the 8-byte aligned note. See PR41000 for a recent report about
.note.gnu.property (NT_GNU_PROPERTY_TYPE_0).
(Note, for NT_GNU_PROPERTY_TYPE_0, the consumers should probably migrate
to PT_GNU_PROPERTY, but the alignment issue affects other notes as well.)
To fix the issue, don't mix notes with different alignments in one
PT_NOTE. If compilers emit 4-byte aligned notes before 8-byte aligned
notes, we'll create at most 2 segments.
sh_size%sh_addralign=0 is actually implied by the rule for linking
unrecognized sections (in generic ABI), so we don't have to check that.
Notes that match in name, type and attribute flags are concatenated into
a single output section. The compilers have to ensure
sh_size%sh_addralign=0 to make concatenated notes parsable.
An alternative approach is to create a PT_NOTE for each SHT_NOTE, but
we'll have to incur the sizeof(Elf64_Phdr)=56 overhead every time a new
note section is introduced.
Reviewers: ruiu, jakehehrlich, phosek, jhenderson, pcc, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, krytarowski, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61296
llvm-svn: 359853
Summary:
The gold plugin behavior (creating empty index files for lazy bitcode
files) was added in D46034, but it missed the case when there is no
non-lazy bitcode files, e.g.
ld.lld -shared crti.o crtbeginS.o --start-lib bitcode.o --end-lib ...
crti.o crtbeginS.o are not bitcode, but our distributed build system
wants bitcode.o.thinlto.bc to confirm all expected outputs are created
based on all of the modules provided to the linker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61420
llvm-svn: 359788
/DISCARD/ output sections were being treated as orphans. As a result, if
a /DISCARD/ output section has been assigned a PHDR, it could cause
incorrect assignment of sections to segments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61186
llvm-svn: 359565
This is a follow up to r358979 which made findOrphanPos only consider
live sections. Unfortunately, this required change to getRankProximity,
used by findOrphanPos, was missed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61197
llvm-svn: 359554
This is https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=38750.
If script references empty sections in LOADADDR/ADDR commands
.empty : { *(.empty ) }
.text : AT(LOADADDR (.empty) + SIZEOF (.empty)) { *(.text) }
then an empty section will be removed and LOADADDR/ADDR will evaluate to null.
It is not that user may expect from using of the generic script, what is a common case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54621
llvm-svn: 359279
Summary:
We use `uint32_t SectionBase::Alignment` and `uint32_t
PhdrEntry::p_align` despite alignments being 64 bits in ELF64.
Fix the std::max template arguments accordingly.
The currently 160-byte InputSection will become 168 bytes if we make SectionBase::Alignment uint64_t.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61171
llvm-svn: 359268
Summary:
We don't take localentry offset into account, and thus may fail to
create a long branch when the gap is just a few bytes smaller than 2^25.
relocation R_PPC64_REL24 out of range: 33554432 is not in [-33554432, 33554431]
relocation R_PPC64_REL24 out of range: 33554436 is not in [-33554432, 33554431]
Fix that by adding the offset to the symbol VA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61058
llvm-svn: 359094
This fixes an issue where a symbol only section at the start of a
PT_LOAD segment, causes incorrect alignment of the file offset for the
start of the segment which results in the output of an invalid ELF.
SHT_PROGBITS was the default output section type in the past.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60131
llvm-svn: 358981
This patch changes the behaviour of findOrphanPos to only consider live
sections when placing orphan sections. This used to be how it behaved in
the past.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60273
llvm-svn: 358979
Make some small adjustment while touching the code: make parameters
const, use less_first(), etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60989
llvm-svn: 358943
Summary:
Fixes PR35242. A simplified reproduce:
thread_local int i; int f() { return i; }
% {g++,clang++} -fPIC -shared -ftls-model=local-dynamic -fuse-ld=lld a.cc
ld.lld: error: can't create dynamic relocation R_X86_64_DTPOFF32 against symbol: i in readonly segment; recompile object files with -fPIC or pass '-Wl,-z,notext' to allow text relocations in the output
In isStaticLinkTimeConstant(), Syn.IsPreemptible is true, so it is not
seen as a constant. The error is then issued in processRelocAux().
A symbol of the local-dynamic TLS model cannot be preempted but it can
preempt symbols of the global-dynamic TLS model in other DSOs.
So it makes some sense that the variable is not static.
This patch fixes the linking error by changing getRelExpr() on
R_386_TLS_LDO_32 and R_X86_64_DTPOFF{32,64} from R_ABS to R_DTPREL.
R_PPC64_DTPREL_* and R_MIPS_TLS_DTPREL_* need similar fixes, but they are not handled in this patch.
As a bonus, we use `if (Expr == R_ABS && !Config->Shared)` to find
ld-to-le opportunities. R_ABS is overloaded here for such STT_TLS symbols.
A dedicated R_DTPREL is clearer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60945
llvm-svn: 358870
Summary:
This relocation type is used by R_386_TLS_GD. Its formula is the same as
R_GOTPLT (e.g R_X86_64_GOT{32,64} R_386_TLS_GOTIE). Rename it to be clearer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60941
llvm-svn: 358868
This is https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=39857.
I added the comment with much more details to the bug page,
the short version is below.
The following script and code demonstrates the issue:
aliasto__text = __text;
SECTIONS {
.text 0x1000 : { __text = . ; *(.text) }
}
...
call aliasto__text
LLD fails with "cannot refer to absolute symbol: aliasto__text" error.
It happens because at the moment of scanning the relocations
we do not yet assign the correct/final/any section value for the symbol aliasto__text.
I made a change to Relocations.cpp to fix that.
Also, I had to remove the symbol-location.s test case completely, because now it does not
trigger any error. Since now all linker scripts symbols are resolved to constants, no
errors can be triggered at all it seems. I checked that it is consistent with the behavior
of bfd and gold (they do not trigger errors for the case from symbol-location.s), so it should
be OK. I.e. at least it is probably not the best possible, but natural behavior we obtained.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55423
llvm-svn: 358652
Summary:
If the output section contains only symbol assignments, we copy flags
from the previous sections. Don't set SHF_ALLOC if NonAlloc is true.
We also have to change the type from SHT_NOBITS to SHT_PROGBITS.
In ld.bfd, bfd_elf_get_default_section_type maps non-alloctable sections to SHT_PROGBITS.
Non-alloctable SHT_NOBITS sections do not make sense.
Fixes PR38626
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59986
llvm-svn: 358650
This generalizes code and also fixes the broken behavior shown in
one of our test cases for some targets, like x86-64.
The issue occurs when the forward declarations are used in the script.
One of the samples is:
SECTIONS {
foo = ADDR(.text) - ABSOLUTE(ADDR(.text));
};
In that case, we have a broken output when output target does
not use thunks. That happens because thunks creating code
(called from maybeAddThunks)
calls Script->assignAddresses() at least one more time,
what fixups the values. As a result final symbols values can
be different on AArch64 and x86, for example.
In this patch, I generalize and rename maybeAddThunks to
finalizeAddressDependentContent and now it is used and called
by all targets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55550
llvm-svn: 358646
Summary:
We access Live and OutputOff (which may share the same memory location)
concurrently in 2 parallelForEachN loops. Separating them avoids subtle
data races like D41884/PR35788. This patch places Live and Hash
together.
2 reasons this is appealing:
1) Hash is immutable. Live is almost read-only - only written once in MarkLive.cpp where
Hash is not accessed
2) we already discard low bits of Hash to decide ShardID. It doesn't
matter much if we make 32-bit Hash to 31-bit.
For a huge internal clang -O3 executable (1.6GiB),
`Strings` in StringTableBuilder::finalizeStringTable contains at most 310253 elements.
The expected number of pair-wise collisions 2^(-31) * C(310253,2) ~= 22.41 is too small to have a negative impact on performance.
Actually, my benchmark shows there is actually a minor performance improvement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60765
llvm-svn: 358645
Patch by Gabriel Smith.
The address for a section would be evaluated before the region was
switched to. Because of this, the position within the region would not
be updated. After the region is swapped to the dot would be set to the
out of date position within the region, undoing the section address
evaluation.
To fix this, the region is swapped to before the section's address is
evaluated. As part of the fallout of this, expandMemoryRegions needed
to be gated in setDot on the condition that the evaluated address is
less than the dot. This is for the case where sections are not listed
from lowest address to highest address.
Finally, a test for the case where sections are listed "out of order"
was added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60744
llvm-svn: 358638
With partitions, each partition should have the same build id. This means
that the build id needs to be only computed once, otherwise we will end up
with different build ids in each partition as a result of the file contents
changing. This change moves the computation of the build id into Writer so
that it only happens once.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60342
llvm-svn: 358536
The typo was introduced to llvm MC in rL204769 (fixed in rL358247) and then to lld.
Also, for relocatable-many-sections.s, the size of .symtab changed at some point and the formula needs update.
llvm-svn: 358248
Patch by Robert O'Callahan.
Rust projects tend to link in all object files from all dependent
libraries and rely on --gc-sections to strip unused code and data.
Unfortunately --gc-sections doesn't currently strip any debuginfo
associated with GC'ed sections, so lld links in the full debuginfo from
all dependencies even if almost all that code has been discarded. See
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56068 for some details.
Properly stripping debuginfo for discarded sections would be difficult,
but a simple approach that helps significantly is to mark debuginfo
sections as live only if their associated object file has at least one
live code/data section. This patch does that. In a (contrived but not
totally artificial) Rust testcase linked above, it reduces the final
binary size from 46MB to 5.1MB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54747
llvm-svn: 358069
The code previously specified a 32-bit range for R_RISCV_HI20 and
R_RISCV_LO12_[IS], however this is incorrect as the maximum offset on
RV64 that can be formed from the immediate of lui and the displacement
of an I-type or S-type instruction is -0x80000800 to 0x7ffff7ff. There
is also the same issue with a c.lui and LO12 pair, whose actual
addressable range should be -0x20800 to 0x1f7ff.
The tests will be included in the next patch that converts all RISC-V
tests to use llvm-mc instead of yaml2obj, as assembler support has
matured enough to write tests in them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60414
llvm-svn: 357995
For partitions I intend to use the same set of version indexes in
each partition for simplicity. Since each partition will need its own
VersionNeedSection this will require moving the verneed tracking out of
VersionNeedSection. The way I've done this is to move most of the tracking
into SharedFile. What will eventually become the per-partition tracking
still lives in VersionNeedSection.
As a bonus the code gets a little simpler and more consistent with how we
handle verdef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60307
llvm-svn: 357926
Previously, we drop symbols starting with .L from the symbol table, so
if there is a relocation that refers a .L symbol, it ended up
referencing a null -- which happened to be interpreted as an absolute
symbol.
This patch copies all symbols including local ones if -emit-reloc is
given.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41385
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60306
llvm-svn: 357885
And rename the function to combineEhSections(). This makes the processing
of .ARM.exidx even more similar to .eh_frame and means that we can avoid an
additional loop over InputSections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60026
llvm-svn: 357417
Summary:
Some synthetic sections can be empty while still being needed, thus they
can't be removed by removeUnusedSyntheticSections(). Rename this member
function to more appropriate isNeeded() with the opposite meaning.
No functional change intended.
Reviewers: ruiu, espindola
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: jhenderson, grimar, emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59982
llvm-svn: 357377
This change itself doesn't mean anything, but it helps D59780 because
in patch, we don't know whether we need to create a CET-aware PLT or
not until we read all input files.
llvm-svn: 357194
Recommit r356666 with fixes for buildbot failure, as well as handling for
--emit-relocs, which we decide not to emit any relocation sections as the
table is already position independent and an offline tool can deduce the
relocations.
Instead of creating extra Synthetic .ARM.exidx sections to account for
gaps in the table, create a single .ARM.exidx SyntheticSection that can
derive the contents of the gaps from a sorted list of the executable
InputSections. This has the benefit of moving the ARM specific code for
SyntheticSections in SHF_LINK_ORDER processing and the table merging code
into the ARM specific SyntheticSection. This also makes it easier to create
EXIDX_CANTUNWIND table entries for executable InputSections that don't
have an associated .ARM.exidx section.
Fixes pr40277
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59216
llvm-svn: 357160
Patch by Tiancong Wang.
In D36351, Call-Chain Clustering (C3) heuristic is implemented with
option --call-graph-ordering-file <file>.
This patch adds a flag --print-symbol-order=<file> to LLD, and when
specified, it prints out the symbols ordered by the heuristics to the
file. The symbols printout is helpful to those who want to understand
the heuristics and want to reproduce the ordering with
--symbol-ordering-file in later pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59311
llvm-svn: 357133
Summary:
This should address remaining issues discussed in PR36555.
Currently R_GOT*_FROM_END are exclusively used by x86 and x86_64 to
express relocations types relative to the GOT base. We have
_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ (GOT base) = start(.got.plt) but end(.got) !=
start(.got.plt)
This can have problems when _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ is used as a symbol, e.g.
glibc dl_machine_dynamic assumes _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ is start(.got.plt),
which is not true.
extern const ElfW(Addr) _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_[] attribute_hidden;
return _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_[0]; // R_X86_64_GOTPC32
In this patch, we
* Change all GOT*_FROM_END to GOTPLT* to fix the problem.
* Add HasGotPltOffRel to denote whether .got.plt should be kept even if
the section is empty.
* Simplify GotSection::empty and GotPltSection::empty by setting
HasGotOffRel and HasGotPltOffRel according to GlobalOffsetTable early.
The change of R_386_GOTPC makes X86::writePltHeader simpler as we don't
have to compute the offset start(.got.plt) - Ebx (it is constant 0).
We still diverge from ld.bfd (at least in most cases) and gold in that
.got.plt and .got are not adjacent, but the advantage doing that is
unclear.
Reviewers: ruiu, sivachandra, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, mehdi_amini, arichardson, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59594
llvm-svn: 356968
lld's mark-sweep garbage collector was written in the visitor pattern.
There are functions that traverses a given graph, and the functions calls
callback functions to dispatch according to node type.
The code was originaly pretty simple, and lambdas worked pretty
well. However, as we add more features to the garbage collector, that became
more like a callback hell. We now have a callback function that wraps
another callback function, for example. It is not easy to follow the flow of
the control.
This patch rewrites it as a regular class. What was once a lambda is now a
regular class member function. I think this change fixes the readability
issue.
No functionality change intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59800
llvm-svn: 356966
Previously, `Entries` contains pairs of symbols and their indices.
The indices are always 0, x, 2x, 3x, ..., where x is the size of
relocation entry. We didn't have to store that values because we can
compute them when we consume them.
llvm-svn: 356812
There is a reproducible buildbot failure (segfault) on the 2 stage
clang-cmake-armv8-lld bot. Reverting while I investigate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59216
llvm-svn: 356684
Instead of creating extra Synthetic .ARM.exidx sections to account for
gaps in the table, create a single .ARM.exidx SyntheticSection that can
derive the contents of the gaps from a sorted list of the executable
InputSections. This has the benefit of moving the ARM specific code for
SyntheticSections in SHF_LINK_ORDER processing and the table merging code
into the ARM specific SyntheticSection. This also makes it easier to create
EXIDX_CANTUNWIND table entries for executable InputSections that don't
have an associated .ARM.exidx section.
Fixes pr40277
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59216
llvm-svn: 356666
Summary:
This implements Rui Ueyama's idea in PR39044.
I've checked that ld.bfd and gold do not have the power-of-2 requirement
and do not require sh_entsize to be a multiple of sh_align.
Now on the updated test merge-entsize.s, all the 3 linkers happily
create .rodata that is not 3-byte aligned.
This has a use case in Linux arch/x86/crypto/sha512-avx2-asm.S
It uses sh_entsize of 640, which is not a power of 2.
See https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/417
Reviewers: ruiu, espindola
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: nickdesaulniers, E5ten, emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59478
llvm-svn: 356428
Summary:
Based on Peter Collingbourne's suggestion in D56828.
Before D56828: PT_LOAD(.data PT_GNU_RELRO(.data.rel.ro .bss.rel.ro) .bss)
Old: PT_LOAD(PT_GNU_RELRO(.data.rel.ro .bss.rel.ro) .data .bss)
New: PT_LOAD(PT_GNU_RELRO(.data.rel.ro .bss.rel.ro)) PT_LOAD(.data. .bss)
The new layout reflects the runtime memory mappings.
By having two PT_LOAD segments, we can utilize the NOBITS part of the
first PT_LOAD and save bytes for .bss.rel.ro.
.bss.rel.ro is currently small and only used by copy relocations of
symbols in read-only segments, but it can be used for other purposes in
the future, e.g. if a relro section's statically relocated data is all
zeros, we can move it to .bss.rel.ro.
Reviewers: espindola, ruiu, pcc
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, kbarton, emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58892
llvm-svn: 356226
We allow an archive file without symbol table as a linker input as a
workaround for a very common error in LTO build. But that logic worked
even for an archive file containing non-bitcode files, which is not
expected. This patch limits that workaround to one that contains only
bitcode files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59373
llvm-svn: 356186
Old: PT_LOAD(.data | PT_GNU_RELRO(.data.rel.ro .bss.rel.ro) | .bss)
New: PT_LOAD(PT_GNU_RELRO(.data.rel.ro .bss.rel.ro) | .data .bss)
The placement of | indicates page alignment caused by PT_GNU_RELRO. The
new layout has simpler rules and saves space for many cases.
Old size: roundup(.data) + roundup(.data.rel.ro)
New size: roundup(.data.rel.ro + .bss.rel.ro) + .data
Other advantages:
* At runtime the 3 memory mappings decrease to 2.
* start(PT_TLS) = start(PT_GNU_RELRO) = start(RW PT_LOAD). This
simplifies binary manipulation tools.
GNU strip before 2.31 discards PT_GNU_RELRO if its
address is not equal to the start of its associated PT_LOAD.
This has been fixed by https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=binutils-gdb.git;h=f2731e0c374e5323ce4cdae2bcc7b7fe22da1a6f
But with this change, we will be compatible with GNU strip before 2.31
* Before, .got.plt (non-relro by default) was placed before .got (relro
by default), which made it impossible to have _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_
(start of .got.plt on x86-64) equal to the end of .got (R_GOT*_FROM_END)
(https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36555). With the new ordering, we
can improve on this regard if we'd like to.
Reviewers: ruiu, espindola, pcc
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits, joerg, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56828
llvm-svn: 356117
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
Original llvm-svn: 355964
llvm-svn: 355984
This does not appear to be necessary because StringTableSection does not
need to be finalized, which also means that we can remove the call to
finalizeSynthetic on .dynstr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59240
llvm-svn: 355977
This shaves another word off SectionBase and makes it possible to clone a
section using the implicit copy constructor.
This basically reverts r311056, which removed the mutex in order to
make the code easier to understand. On balance I think it's probably more
straightforward to have a mutex here than to have an unusual copy constructor
in SectionBase.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59269
llvm-svn: 355966
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
llvm-svn: 355964
We don't need to take a slice of SectionCommands in addOrphanSections()
because it is not modified until the end of the function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59239
llvm-svn: 355954
This matches the ELF does. Update the comment in ELF/Symbols.h and
duplicate it in wasm/Symbols.h
This a followup on rL355580 and rL355577.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59075
llvm-svn: 355737
- The Assigned bit was previously taking a word on its own. Move
it into the bit fields in SectionBase.
- NumRelocations and AreRelocsRela were previously also taking up
a word despite only using half of it. Move them into the alignment gap
after SectionBase's fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59044
llvm-svn: 355622
We're going to need a separate VersionNeedSection for each partition, and
the partition data structure won't be templated.
With this the VersionTableSection class no longer needs ELFT, so detemplate it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58808
llvm-svn: 355478
This lets us detect file size overflows when creating a 64-bit binary on
a 32-bit machine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58840
llvm-svn: 355218
r355153 introduced a build failure on a build bot that uses clang natively
on an armv7-a machine. This a temporary fix to use size_t rather than
uint64_t.
llvm-svn: 355195
This lets us remove the special case from Writer::writeSections(), and also
fixes a bug where .eh_frame_hdr isn't necessarily written in the correct
order if a linker script moves .eh_frame and .eh_frame_hdr into the same
output section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58795
llvm-svn: 355153
That patch is the fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40703
"wrong line number info for obj file compiled with -ffunction-sections"
bug. The problem happened with only .o files. If object file contains
several .text sections then line number information showed incorrectly.
The reason for this is that DwarfLineTable could not detect section which
corresponds to specified address(because address is the local to the
section). And as the result it could not select proper sequence in the
line table. The fix is to pass SectionIndex with the address. So that it
would be possible to differentiate addresses from various sections. With
this fix llvm-objdump shows correct line numbers for disassembled code.
Differential review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58194
llvm-svn: 354972
This patch removes the precompiled binary from inputs,
replacing it with a YAML. And teaches LLD to report a
section name in case of such error.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58670
llvm-svn: 354959
Summary:
The gold linker allowed you to output the ELF files after LTO was run. It did
it by using the 'obj-path' option. This replicates that behavior.
Reviewers: espindola, ruiu, MaskRay, pcc
Reviewed By: MaskRay, pcc
Subscribers: grimar, emaste, inglorion, arichardson, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56046
llvm-svn: 354917
The linux kernel uses an old flag -p/-no-pipeline-knowledge that is
accepted by bfd and gold but ignored by modern versions of them. The
original option is very old and is pre-ABI, it sometimes comes up in
code-bases that had support for pre ABI toolchains. The Linux kernel uses
it in 3 places in the ARM specific section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58540
llvm-svn: 354769
RelocationBaseSection is not used in -r links, so Config->Relocatable will
always be false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58489
llvm-svn: 354607
Three MIPS-specific sections `.reginfo`, `.MIPS.options`, and `.MIPS.abiflags`
are used by loader to read their contents and setup environment for running
a program. Loader looks up these data in the corresponding segments:
`PT_MIPS_REGINFO`, `PT_MIPS_OPTIONS`, and `PT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS` respectively.
This patch put these sections to separate segments like we do already
for ARM `SHT_ARM_EXIDX` section.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D58381
llvm-svn: 354468
MIPS R6 code uses the `R_MIPS_PC26_S2` relocation for calls which might
cross boundaries of non-PIC-to-PIC code. We need to create a LA25 thunks
for that case.
llvm-svn: 354312
The patch solves two tasks:
1. MIPS ABI allows to mix regular and microMIPS code and perform
cross-mode jumps. Linker needs to detect such cases and replace
jump/branch instructions by their cross-mode equivalents.
2. Other tools like dunamic linkers need to recognize cases when dynamic
table entries, e_entry field of an ELF header etc point to microMIPS
symbol. Linker should provide such information.
The first task is implemented in the `MIPS<ELFT>::relocateOne()` method.
New routine `fixupCrossModeJump` detects ISA mode change, checks and
replaces an instruction.
The main problem is how to recognize that relocation target is microMIPS
symbol. For absolute and section symbols compiler or assembler set the
less-significant bit of the symbol's value or sum of the symbol's value
and addend. And this bit signals to linker about microMIPS code. For
global symbols compiler cannot do the same trick because other tools like,
for example, disassembler wants to know an actual position of the symbol.
So compiler sets STO_MIPS_MICROMIPS flag in the `st_other` field.
In `MIPS<ELFT>::relocateOne()` method we have a symbol's value only and
cannot access any symbol's attributes. To pass type of the symbol
(regular/microMIPS) to that routine as well as other places where we
write a symbol value as-is (.dynamic section, `Elf_Ehdr::e_entry` field
etc) we set when necessary a less-significant bit in the `getSymVA`
function.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40147
llvm-svn: 354311