Noticed while testing for an out of tree target. There are probably more tests that should be so marked.
I'm not sure who owns these tests so I've added a few names I recognise from the recent history.
With advice from probinson, ruiu, rafael and dramatically improved by davidb. Thank you all!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34685
llvm-svn: 308335
The previous logic to find default entry name or subsystem does not
seem correct (i.e. was not compatible with MSVC linker). Previously,
default entry name was inferred from CRT functions and user-defined
entry functions. Subsystem was inferred from CRT functions.
Default entry name and subsystem are now inferred based on the
following table. Note that we no longer use CRT functions to infer
them.
Entry name Subsystem
main mainCRTStartup console
wmain wmainCRTStartup console
WinMain WinMainCRTStartup windows
wWinMain wWinMainCRTStartup windows
llvm-svn: 240922
This is a case that one mistake caused a very mysterious bug.
I made a mistake to calculate addresses of common symbols, so
each common symbol pointed not to the beginning of its location
but to the end of its location. (Ouch!)
Common symbols are aligned on 16 byte boundaries. If a common
symbol is small enough to fit between the end of its real
location and whatever comes next, this bug didn't cause any harm.
However, if a common symbol is larger than that, its memory
naturally overlapped with other symbols. That means some
uninitialized variables accidentally shared memory. Because
totally unrelated memory writes mutated other varaibles, it was
hard to debug.
It's surprising that LLD was able to link itself and all LLD
tests except gunit tests passed with this nasty bug.
With this fix, the new COFF linker is able to pass all tests
for LLVM, Clang and LLD if I use MSVC cl.exe as a compiler.
Only three tests are failing when used with clang-cl.
llvm-svn: 240216