Summary:
This adds support to option -plugin-opt=dwo_dir=${DIR}. This option is used to specify the directory to store the .dwo files when LTO and debug fission is used
at the same time.
Reviewers: ruiu, espindola, pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: eraman, dexonsmith, mehdi_amini, emaste, arichardson, steven_wu, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47904
llvm-svn: 337195
Patch by Rahul Chaudhry!
This change adds experimental support for SHT_RELR sections, proposed
here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/generic-abi/bX460iggiKg
Pass '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr' to enable generation of SHT_RELR section
and DT_RELR, DT_RELRSZ, and DT_RELRENT dynamic tags.
Definitions for the new ELF section type and dynamic array tags, as well
as the encoding used in the new section are all under discussion and are
subject to change. Use with caution!
Pass '--use-android-relr-tags' with '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr' to use
SHT_ANDROID_RELR section type instead of SHT_RELR, as well as
DT_ANDROID_RELR* dynamic tags instead of DT_RELR*. The generated
section contents are identical.
'--pack-dyn-relocs=android+relr --use-android-relr-tags' enables both
'--pack-dyn-relocs=android' and '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr': lld will
encode the relative relocations in a SHT_ANDROID_RELR section, and pack
the rest of the dynamic relocations in a SHT_ANDROID_REL(A) section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48247
llvm-svn: 336594
Almost all entries inside MIPS GOT are referenced by signed 16-bit
index. Zero entry lies approximately in the middle of the GOT. So the
total number of GOT entries cannot exceed ~16384 for 32-bit architecture
and ~8192 for 64-bit architecture. This limitation makes impossible to
link rather large application like for example LLVM+Clang. There are two
workaround for this problem. The first one is using the -mxgot
compiler's flag. It enables using a 32-bit index to access GOT entries.
But each access requires two assembly instructions two load GOT entry
index to a register. Another workaround is multi-GOT. This patch
implements it.
Here is a brief description of multi-GOT for detailed one see the
following link https://dmz-portal.mips.com/wiki/MIPS_Multi_GOT.
If the sum of local, global and tls entries is less than 64K only single
got is enough. Otherwise, multi-got is created. Series of primary and
multiple secondary GOTs have the following layout:
```
- Primary GOT
Header
Local entries
Global entries
Relocation only entries
TLS entries
- Secondary GOT
Local entries
Global entries
TLS entries
...
```
All GOT entries required by relocations from a single input file
entirely belong to either primary or one of secondary GOTs. To reference
GOT entries each GOT has its own _gp value points to the "middle" of the
GOT. In the code this value loaded to the register which is used for GOT
access.
MIPS 32 function's prologue:
```
lui v0,0x0
0: R_MIPS_HI16 _gp_disp
addiu v0,v0,0
4: R_MIPS_LO16 _gp_disp
```
MIPS 64 function's prologue:
```
lui at,0x0
14: R_MIPS_GPREL16 main
```
Dynamic linker does not know anything about secondary GOTs and cannot
use a regular MIPS mechanism for GOT entries initialization. So we have
to use an approach accepted by other architectures and create dynamic
relocations R_MIPS_REL32 to initialize global entries (and local in case
of PIC code) in secondary GOTs. But ironically MIPS dynamic linker
requires GOT entries and correspondingly ordered dynamic symbol table
entries to deal with dynamic relocations. To handle this problem
relocation-only section in the primary GOT contains entries for all
symbols referenced in global parts of secondary GOTs. Although the sum
of local and normal global entries of the primary got should be less
than 64K, the size of the primary got (including relocation-only entries
can be greater than 64K, because parts of the primary got that overflow
the 64K limit are used only by the dynamic linker at dynamic link-time
and not by 16-bit gp-relative addressing at run-time.
The patch affects common LLD code in the following places:
- Added new hidden -mips-got-size flag. This flag required to set low
maximum size of a single GOT to be able to test the implementation using
small test cases.
- Added InputFile argument to the getRelocTargetVA function. The same
symbol referenced by GOT relocation from different input file might be
allocated in different GOT. So result of relocation depends on the file.
- Added new ctor to the DynamicReloc class. This constructor records
settings of dynamic relocation which used to adjust address of 64kb page
lies inside a specific output section.
With the patch LLD is able to link all LLVM+Clang+LLD applications and
libraries for MIPS 32/64 targets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31528
llvm-svn: 334390
Clang passes --plugin /path/to/LLVMgold.so to the linker when -flto is
passed. After r333607 we only ignore --plugin as a joined argument,
which means that the following argument (/path/to/LLVMgold.so) is
interpreted as an input file. This means that either every LTO'd
program ends up being linked with the gold plugin or we error out
if the plugin does not exist. The fix is to use Eq to ignore both
--plugin=foo and --plugin foo as before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47657
llvm-svn: 333793
Since aliases don't actually need name, I removed it from Options.td
to keep the definitions concise.
Before:
-( Ignored for compatibility with GNU unless you pass --warn-backrefs
-) Ignored for compatibility with GNU unless you pass --warn-backrefs
--allow-multiple-definition Allow multiple definitions
--apply-dynamic-relocs Apply dynamic relocations to place
--as-needed Only set DT_NEEDED for shared libraries if used
--auxiliary=<value> Set DT_AUXILIARY field to the specified name
--Bdynamic Link against shared libraries
--Bshareable Build a shared object
...
After:
-( Alias for --start-group
-) Alias for --end-group
--allow-multiple-definition Allow multiple definitions
--apply-dynamic-relocs Apply dynamic relocations to place
--as-needed Only set DT_NEEDED for shared libraries if used
--auxiliary=<value> Set DT_AUXILIARY field to the specified name
--Bdynamic Link against shared libraries (default)
--Bshareable Alias for --shared
...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47588
llvm-svn: 333694
Summary:
After r333596, rpath-link no longer consumes the following argument, and
the path argument left by it confuses LLD.
Reviewers: espindola, ruiu
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: ruiu, emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47591
llvm-svn: 333686
--push-state implemented in this patch saves the states of --as-needed,
--whole-archive and --static. It saves less number of flags than GNU linkers.
Since even GNU linkers save different flags, no one seems to care about the
details. In this patch, I tried to save the minimal number of flags to not
complicate the implementation and the siutation.
I'm not personally happy about adding the --{push,pop}-state flags though.
That options seem too hacky to me. However, gcc started using the options
since GCC 8 when GNU ld is available at the build time. Therefore, lld
is no longer a drop-in replacmenet for GNU linker for that machine
without supporting the flags.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34567
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47542
llvm-svn: 333646
Previously, we printed out two lines of help messages for `--foo bar`
and `--foo=bar` like this:
--soname=<value> Set DT_SONAME
--soname <value> Set DT_SONAME
--sort-section=<value> Specifies sections sorting rule when linkerscript is used
--sort-section <value> Specifies sections sorting rule when linkerscript is used
This change eliminates duplicate lines that doesn't contain `=` for such
options like this.
--soname=<value> Set DT_SONAME
--sort-section=<value> Specifies sections sorting rule when linkerscript is used
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47558
llvm-svn: 333596
Previously, we had a loop to iterate over options starting with
`--plugin-opt=` and parse them by hand. But we can make OptTable
do that job for us.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47167
llvm-svn: 332935
The --keep-unique <symbol> option is taken from gold. The intention is that
<symbol> will be prevented from being folded by ICF. Although not
specifically mentioned in the documentation <symbol> only matches
global symbols, with a warning if the symbol is not found.
The implementation finds the Section defining <symbol> and removes it from
the set of sections considered for ICF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46755
llvm-svn: 332332
This is most useful when using lld-link on a non-Win host (but it might become
useful on Windows too if lld also grows a fansi-escape-codes flag).
Also make the help for --color-diagnostic mention the valid values in ELF and
wasm, and print the flag name with two dashes in diags, since the one-dash form
is seen as a list of many one-letter flags in some contexts.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46693
llvm-svn: 332012
The input file for this option should contain a list of symbols, not a
list of sections, so explicitly refer to ordering symbols (but keep the
reference to laying out sections, since that's how the option must
operate). Referring to the file itself as the "symbol ordering file" is
consistent with --warn-symbol-ordering and less ambiguous than "symbol
file" (albeit slightly redundant).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46099
llvm-svn: 331000
I'm proposing a new command line flag, --warn-backrefs in this patch.
The flag and the feature proposed below don't exist in GNU linkers
nor the current lld.
--warn-backrefs is an option to detect reverse or cyclic dependencies
between static archives, and it can be used to keep your program
compatible with GNU linkers after you switch to lld. I'll explain the
feature and why you may find it useful below.
lld's symbol resolution semantics is more relaxed than traditional
Unix linkers. Therefore,
ld.lld foo.a bar.o
succeeds even if bar.o contains an undefined symbol that have to be
resolved by some object file in foo.a. Traditional Unix linkers
don't allow this kind of backward reference, as they visit each
file only once from left to right in the command line while
resolving all undefined symbol at the moment of visiting.
In the above case, since there's no undefined symbol when a linker
visits foo.a, no files are pulled out from foo.a, and because the
linker forgets about foo.a after visiting, it can't resolve
undefined symbols that could have been resolved otherwise.
That lld accepts more relaxed form means (besides it makes more
sense) that you can accidentally write a command line or a build
file that works only with lld, even if you have a plan to
distribute it to wider users who may be using GNU linkers. With
--check-library-dependency, you can detect a library order that
doesn't work with other Unix linkers.
The option is also useful to detect cyclic dependencies between
static archives. Again, lld accepts
ld.lld foo.a bar.a
even if foo.a and bar.a depend on each other. With --warn-backrefs
it is handled as an error.
Here is how the option works. We assign a group ID to each file. A
file with a smaller group ID can pull out object files from an
archive file with an equal or greater group ID. Otherwise, it is a
reverse dependency and an error.
A file outside --{start,end}-group gets a fresh ID when
instantiated. All files within the same --{start,end}-group get the
same group ID. E.g.
ld.lld A B --start-group C D --end-group E
A and B form group 0, C, D and their member object files form group
1, and E forms group 2. I think that you can see how this group
assignment rule simulates the traditional linker's semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45195
llvm-svn: 329636
This is an option to print out a table of symbols and filenames.
The output format of this option is the same as GNU, so that it can be
processed by the same scripts as before after migrating from GNU to lld.
This option is mildly useful; we can live without it. But it is pretty
convenient sometimes, and it can be implemented in 50 lines of code, so
I think lld should support this option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44336
llvm-svn: 327565
GNU linkers by convention supports both `--foo bar` and `--foo=bar` styles
for all long options that take arguments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43972
llvm-svn: 326506
This reverts commit r325679 that was committed without discussion.
Actually, in the discussion thread, most people opposed to have this
option in lld. Reverting that change doesn't mean that this is a
final decision, but that needs to be discussed first.
llvm-svn: 325714
In r324043, --nopie was renamed to --no-pie to presumably fix a typo.
As it turns out, "nopie" wasn't a typo but the spelling used by
OpenBSD's binutils ld. Gold on the other hand spells the flag "no-pie".
(Vanilla binutils doesn't have a flag like this at all.)
Since they do the same thing, let's support both spellings.
llvm-svn: 325679
We are running lld tests with "--full-shutdown" option because we don't
want to call _exit() in lld if it is running tests. Regular shutdown
is needed for leak sanitizer.
This patch changes the way how we tell lld that it is running tests.
Now "--full-shutdown" is removed, and LLD_IN_TEST environment variable
is used instead.
This patch enables full shutdown on all ports, e.g. ELF, COFF and wasm.
Previously, we enabled it only for ELF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43410
llvm-svn: 325413
There are a number of different situations when symbols are requested
to be ordered in the --symbol-ordering-file that cannot be ordered for
some reason. To assist with identifying these symbols, and either
tidying up the order file, or the inputs, a number of warnings have
been added. As some users may find these warnings unhelpful, due to how
they use the symbol ordering file, a switch has also been added to
disable these warnings.
The cases where we now warn are:
* Entries in the order file that don't correspond to any symbol in the input
* Undefined symbols
* Absolute symbols
* Symbols imported from shared objects
* Symbols that are discarded, due to e.g. --gc-sections or /DISCARD/ linker script sections
* Multiple of the same entry in the order file
Reviewed by: rafael, ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42475
llvm-svn: 325125
When resolving dynamic RELA relocations the addend is taken from the
relocation and not the place being relocated. Accordingly lld does not
write the addend field to the place like it would for a REL relocation.
Unfortunately there is some system software, in particlar dynamic loaders
such as Bionic's linker64 that use the value of the place prior to
relocation to find the offset that they have been loaded at. Both gold
and bfd control this behavior with the --[no-]apply-dynamic-relocs option.
This change implements the option and defaults it to true for compatibility
with gold and bfd.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42797
llvm-svn: 324221
--nopie was a typo. GNU gold doesn't recognize it. It is also
inconsistent with other options that have --foo and --no-foo.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42825
llvm-svn: 324043
Currently ICF information is output through stderr if the "--verbose"
flag is used. This differs to Gold for example, which uses an explicit
flag to output this to stdout. This commit adds the
"--print-icf-sections" and "--no-print-icf-sections" flags and changes
the output message format for clarity and consistency with
"--print-gc-sections". These messages are still output to stderr if
using the verbose flag. However to avoid intermingled message output to
console, this will not occur when the "--print-icf-sections" flag is
used.
Existing tests have been modified to expect the new message format from
stderr.
Patch by Owen Reynolds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42375
Reviewers: ruiu, rafael
Reviewed by:
llvm-svn: 323976
When we have --icf=safe we should be able to define --icf=all as a
shorthand for --icf=safe --ignore-function-address-equality.
For now --ignore-function-address-equality is used only to control
access to non preemptable symbols in shared libraries.
llvm-svn: 322152
The ARM.exidx section contains a table of 8-byte entries with the first
word of each entry an offset to the function it describes and the second
word instructions for unwinding if an exception is thrown from that
function. The SHF_LINK_ORDER processing will order the table in ascending
order of the functions described by the exception table entries. As the
address range of an exception table entry is terminated by the next table
entry, it is possible to merge consecutive table entries that have
identical unwind instructions.
For this implementation we define a table entry to be identical if:
- Both entries are the special EXIDX_CANTUNWIND.
- Both entries have the same inline unwind instructions.
We do not attempt to establish if table entries that are references to
.ARM.extab sections are identical.
This implementation works at a granularity of a single .ARM.exidx
InputSection. If all entries in the InputSection are identical to the
previous table entry we can remove the InputSection. A more sophisticated
but more complex implementation would rewrite InputSection contents so that
duplicates within a .ARM.exidx InputSection can be merged.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40967
llvm-svn: 320803
An internal linker has support for merging identical data and in some
cases it can be a significant win.
This is behind an off by default flag so it has to be requested
explicitly.
llvm-svn: 320448
Add a new file AArch64ErrataFix.cpp that implements the logic to scan for
the Cortex-A53 Erratum 843419. This involves finding all the executable
code, disassembling the instructions that might trigger the erratum and
reporting a message if the sequence is detected.
At this stage we do not attempt to fix the erratum, this functionality
will be added in a later patch. See D36749 for proposal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36742
llvm-svn: 319780
The Android relocation packing format is a more compact
format for dynamic relocations in executables and DSOs
that is based on delta encoding and SLEBs. An overview
of the format can be found in the Android source code:
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/refs/heads/master/tools/relocation_packer/src/delta_encoder.h
This patch implements relocation packing using that format.
This implementation uses a more intelligent algorithm for compressing
relative relocations than Android's own relocation packer. As a
result it can generally create smaller relocation sections than
that packer. If I link Chromium for Android targeting ARM32 I get a
.rel.dyn of size 174693 bytes, as compared to 371832 bytes with gold
and the Android packer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39152
llvm-svn: 316775