Dont emit Mapping symbols for sections that contain only data.
Summary:
Dont emit mapping symbols for sections that contain only data.
Reviewers: rengolin, weimingz, kparzysz, t.p.northover, peter.smith
Reviewed By: t.p.northover
Patched by Shankar Easwaran <shankare@codeaurora.org>
Subscribers: alekseyshl, t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30724
llvm-svn: 299392
On Solaris ld (and some other tools that use the underlying utility
libraries, such as elfdump) chokes on an archive library that has no
symbol table. The Solaris tools always create one, even if it's empty.
That bug has been fixed in the latest development line, and can
probably be backported to a supported release, but it would be nice if
LLVM's archiver could emit the empty symbol table, too.
Patch by Danek Duvall!
llvm-svn: 297773
For whatever reason ld64 requires that member headers (not the member
themselves) should be aligned. The only way to do that is to edit the
previous member so that it ends at an aligned boundary.
Since modifying data put in an archive is an undesirable property,
llvm-ar should only do it when it is absolutely necessary.
llvm-svn: 295765
ld64 requires its archive members to be 8-byte aligned for 64-bit
content and 4-byte aligned for 32-bit content. Opt for the larger
alignment requirement. This ensures that ld64 can consume archives
generated by llvm-ar.
Thanks to Kevin Enderby for the hint about the ld64/cctools behaviours!
Resolves PR28361!
llvm-svn: 294615
it was printing the field name fileoff instead of filesize. The original check
was added in r278557.
This was found in tracking down the problem that lead to the fix in
r293842 - [dsymutil] Fix __LINKEDIT vmsize in dsymutil upgrade path
rdar://30386075
llvm-svn: 294354
To better match the old darwin otool(1) behavior, when llvm-obdump(1) is used
with the -macho option and the input file is not an object file simply print
the file name and this message:
foo: is not an object file
and continue on to process other input files. Also in this case don’t exit
non-zero. This should help in some OSS projects' with autoconf scripts
that are expecting the old darwin otool(1) behavior.
rdar://26828015
llvm-svn: 293547
R_X86_64_NONE can be emitted without a symbol associated (well,
in theory it should never be emitted in an ABI-compliant relocatable
object). So, if there's no symbol associated to a reloc, emit one
with an empty name, instead of crashing.
Ack'ed by Michael Spencer offline.
PR: 31768
llvm-svn: 293224
It describes a region of arbitrary data included in a Mach-O file.
Its initial use is to record extra data in MH_CORE files.
rdar://30001545
rdar://30001731
llvm-svn: 292500
These are OpenBSD specific program headers.
OpenBSD commit:
d39116912b
It is required for fixing PR31288.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27456
llvm-svn: 288831
Summary:
When using thin archives, and processing the same archive multiple times, we were mangling existing entries. The root cause is that we were calling computeRelativePath() more than once. Here, we only call it when adding new members to an archive.
Note that D27218 changes the way thin archives are printed, and will break the new unit test included here. Depending on which one lands first, the other will need to be slightly modified.
Reviewers: rafael, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27217
llvm-svn: 288280
Add the checking for both the MachO::fat_header and the
MachO::fat_arch struct values in the constructor for
MachOUniversalBinary. Such that when the constructor
for ObjectForArch is called it can assume the values in
the MachO::fat_arch for the offset and size are contained
in the file after the MachOUniversalBinary constructor
is called for the Parent.
llvm-svn: 288084
Undefined and weak symbols don't have a meaningful size or value.
As such, nothing should be printed for those attributes (this is
already done for the address with 'U') with the BSD format. This
matches what GNU nm does.
Note that for the POSIX.2 format [1] zero values are still
printed for the size and value. This seems in spirit with
the format strings in that specification, but is debatable.
[1] http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26936
llvm-svn: 287802
This has two advantages:
1) We slowly move away from ErrorOr to the new handling interface,
in the hope of having an uniform error handling in LLVM, eventually.
2) We're starting to have *meaningful* error messages for invalid
object ELF files, rather than a generic "parse error". At some point
we should include also the offset to improve the quality of the
diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 287081
the offsets and sizes of an element of the Mach-O file overlaps with
another element in the Mach-O file.
Some other tests for malformed Mach-O files now run into these
checks so their tests were also adjusted.
llvm-svn: 285860
the offsets and sizes of an element of the file overlaps with
another element in the Mach-O file.
This shows the approach to this testing for three elements
and contains for tests for their overlap. Checking for all the
remain elements will be added next.
llvm-svn: 285632
with fix: edited invalid-section-index2.elf input to pass the new check and
fail on the same place it was intended to fail.
Original commit message:
Elf.h already has code checking that section table does not go past end of file.
Problem is that this check may not work on values greater than UINT64_MAX / Header->e_shentsize
because of calculation overflow.
Parch fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25432
llvm-svn: 285586
obsolete load commands.
Again the philosophy of the error checking in libObject for
Mach-O files, the idea behind the checking is that we never
will return a Mach-O file out of libObject that contains unknown
things the library code can’t operate on. So known obsolete
load commands will cause a hard error.
Also to make things clear I have added comments to the
values and structures in Support/Mach-O.h and
Support/MachO.def as to what is obsolete.
As noted in a TODO in the code, there may need to be a
non-default mode to allow some unknown values for well
structured Mach-O files with things like unknown load
load commands. So things like using an old lldb on a newer
Mach-O file could still provide some limited functionality.
llvm-svn: 285342
Elf.h already has code checking that section table does not go past end of file.
Problem is that this check may not work on values greater than UINT64_MAX / Header->e_shentsize
because of calculation overflow.
Parch fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25432
llvm-svn: 285285
Revealed using "id_000038,sig_11,src_000015,op_havoc,rep_16" from PR30540,
when sh_size was 0, crash happened.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25091
llvm-svn: 285282
Most of the version of report_error were quoting the filename and
printing a colon between the file name and the error message, but this
one wasn't doing either of those. Fix the output to be more
consistent.
llvm-svn: 285252
load commands that use the MachO::twolevel_hints_command type
which includes only the LC_TWOLEVEL_HINTS load command.
This is not used in llvm libObject code or in llvm tool code. But
does appear in one of the binary test files. While this load command is
obsolete it is easier to add code for it in libObject than edit or change
the binary test case.
llvm-svn: 284769
load commands that use the MachO::thread_command type
but are not used in llvm libObject code but used in llvm tool code.
This includes the LC_UNIXTHREAD and LC_THREAD
load commands.
A quick note about the philosophy of the error checking in
libObject for Mach-O files, the idea behind the checking is
that we never will return a Mach-O file out of libObject that
contains unknown things in the load commands.
To do this the 32-bit ARM and PPC general tread states
needed to be defined as two test case binaries contained
them. If other thread states for other CPUs need to be
added we will do that as needed.
Going forward the LC_MAIN load command is used to
set the entry point in Mach-O executables these days
instead of an LC_UNIXTHREAD as was done in the past.
So today only in core files are LC_THREAD load commands
and thread states usually found.
Other thread states have not yet been defined in
include/Support/MachO.h at this time. But that can be
added as needed with their corresponding checking also
added.
llvm-svn: 284668
load command that use the MachO:: linkedit_data_command
type but is not used in llvm libObject code but used in llvm tool code.
This is for the LC_CODE_SIGNATURE load command.
llvm-svn: 284529
load commands that use the MachO::routines_command and
and MachO::routines_command_64 types but are not used in llvm
libObject code but used in llvm tool code.
This includes the LC_ROUTINES and LC_ROUTINES_64
load commands.
llvm-svn: 284504