strings don't mix so easily. This fixes the last remaining failure
I have in 'check-all' on a system with both Python3 and and Python2
installed.
llvm-svn: 224947
allows it to support multilib suffixed hosts using lib64, etc. This
variable is now available both in the direct LLVM build and from the
LLVMConfig.cmake file used by standalone builds.
llvm-svn: 224925
If a regular symbol has microMIPS-bit we need to stop linking. Now the
LLD does not check the `applyRelocation` return value and continues
linking anyway. As a temporary workaround use the `llvm_unreachable`
call to stop the linker.
llvm-svn: 224831
The LLD output in the YAML mode depends on LLD_RUN_ROUNDTRIP_TEST
environment variable. Do not check unimportant YAML items like section-name.
llvm-svn: 224830
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
ReaderErrorCategory was used only at one place. We now have a
DynamicErrorCategory for this kind of one-time error, so use it.
The calling function doesn't really care the type of an error, so
ReaderErrorCategory was actually dead code.
llvm-svn: 224245
These member functions returns either no_more_files error or a File object.
We could simply return a nullptr instead of a no_more_files.
This function will be removed soon as a part of InputGraph cleanup.
I had to do that step by step.
llvm-svn: 224208
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
Some targets like microMIPS and ARM Thumb use the last bit of a symbol's
value to mark 'compressed' code. This patch adds new virtual function
`DynamicTable::getAtomVirtualAddress` which allows to adjust a symbol's
value before using it in a dynamic table tags like DT_INIT / DT_FINI.
llvm-svn: 223963
The LLD linker searches initializer and finalizer function names
and emits DT_INIT/DT_FINI dynamic table tags to point to these symbols.
The -init/-fini command line options override initializer ("_init") and
finalizer ("_fini") function names used by default.
Now the -init/-fini options do not affect .init_array/.fini_array
sections. The corresponding code has been removed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6578
llvm-svn: 223917
At present each TargetRelocationHandler generates a pretty similar error
string and calls llvm_unreachable() when encountering an unknown
relocation. This is not ideal for two reasons:
1. llvm_unreachable disappears in release builds but we still want to
know if we encountered a relocation we couldn't handle in release
builds.
2. Duplication is bad - there is no need to have a per-architecture error
message.
This change adds a test for AArch64 to test whether or not the error
message actually works. The other architectures have not been tested
but they compile and check-lld passes.
llvm-svn: 223782
Looks like if you have symbol foo in a module-definition file
(.def file), and if the actual symbol name to match that export
description is _foo@x (where x is an integer), the exported
symbol name becomes this.
- foo in the .dll file
- foo@x in the .lib file
I have checked in a few fixes recently for exported symbol name mangling.
I haven't found a simple rule that governs all the mangling rules.
There may not ever exist. For now, this is a patch to improve .lib
file compatibility.
llvm-svn: 223524
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