Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Atanasyan 55c2699d29 Follow-up to r221913. Fix some -Wcast-qual warning reasons.
llvm-svn: 221974
2014-11-14 07:15:43 +00:00
Shankar Easwaran 2b67fca033 Sort include files according to convention.
llvm-svn: 220131
2014-10-18 05:33:55 +00:00
Rui Ueyama e05d380486 Move Simple.h and Alias.h to include/Core.
Because the files in Core actually depend on these files.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4000

llvm-svn: 210710
2014-06-11 21:47:51 +00:00
Rui Ueyama d6ad741e5e Add "override" to member functions where appropriate.
llvm-svn: 202998
2014-03-05 19:50:03 +00:00
Rui Ueyama 2e09d93f74 [PECOFF] Emit Load Configuration and SEH Table for x86.
If all input files are compatible with Structured Exception Handling, linker
is supposed to create an exectuable with a table for SEH handlers. The table
consists of exception handlers entry point addresses.

The basic idea of SEH in x86 Microsoft ABI is to list all valid entry points
of exception handlers in an read-only memory, so that an attacker cannot
override the addresses in it. In x86 ABI, data for exception handling is mostly
on stack, so it's volnerable to stack overflow attack. In order to protect
against it, Windows runtime uses the table to check a return address, to
ensure that the address is really an valid entry point for an exception handler.

Compiler emits a list of exception handler functions to .sxdata section. It
also emits a marker symbol "@feat.00" to indicate that the object is compatible
with SEH. SEH is a relatively new feature for COFF, and mixing SEH-compatible
and SEH-incompatible objects will result in an invalid executable, so is the
marker.

If all input files are compatible with SEH, LLD emits a SEH table. SEH table
needs to be pointed by Load Configuration strucutre, so when emitting a SEH
table LLD emits it too. The address of a Load Configuration will be stored to
the file header.

llvm-svn: 202248
2014-02-26 08:27:59 +00:00