This is a basic initial implementation of the -flat_namespace and
-undefined options for LLD-darwin. It ignores several subtlties,
but the result is close enough that we can now link LLVM (but not
clang) on Darwin and pass all regression tests.
llvm-svn: 248732
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
The darwin linker lets you rearrange functions and data for better locality
(less paging). You do this with the -order_file option which supplies a text
file containing one symbol per line.
Implementing this required a small change to LayoutPass to add a custom sorter
hook.
llvm-svn: 221545
The darwin linker has two ways to force all members of an archive to be loaded.
The -all_load option applies to all static libraries. The -force_load takes
a path to a library and just that library's members are force loaded.
llvm-svn: 221477
The darwin linker does not process dwarf debug info. Instead it produces a
"debug map" in the output file which points back to the original .o files for
anything that wants debug info (e.g. debugger).
The -S option means "don't add a debug map". lld for mach-o currently does
not generate the debug map, so there is nothing to do when this option is used.
But we need to process the option to get existing projects building.
llvm-svn: 221432
To deal with cycles in shared library dependencies, the darwin linker supports
marking specific link dependencies as "upward". An upward link is when a
lower level library links against a higher level library.
llvm-svn: 219949
This option is added by Xcode when it runs the linker. It produces a binary
file which contains the file the linker used. Xcode uses the info to
dynamically update it dependency tracking.
To check the content of the binary file, the test case uses a python script
to dump the binary file as text which FileCheck can check.
llvm-svn: 219039
The darwin linker has the -demangle option which directs it to demangle C++
(and soon Swift) mangled symbol names. Long term we need some Diagnostics object
for formatting errors and warnings. But for now we have the Core linker just
writing messages to llvm::errs(). So, to enable demangling, I changed the
Resolver to call a LinkingContext method on the symbol name.
To make this more interesting, the demangling code is done via __cxa_demangle()
which is part of the C++ ABI, which is only supported on some platforms, so I
had to conditionalize the code with the config generated HAVE_CXXABI_H.
llvm-svn: 218718
There is a bit (MH_PIE) in the flags field of the mach_header which tells
the kernel is a program was built position independent (for ASLR). The linker
automatically attempts to build programs PIE if they are built for a recent
OS version. But the -pie and -no_pie options override that default behavior.
llvm-svn: 217408
Both options control the final scope of atoms.
When -exported_symbols_list <file> is used, the file is parsed into one
symbol per line in the file. Only those symbols will be exported (global)
in the final linked image.
The -keep_private_externs option is only used with -r mode. Normally, -r
mode reduces private extern (scopeLinkageUnit) symbols to non-external. But
add the -keep_private_externs option keeps them private external.
llvm-svn: 216146
The darwin linker has an option, heavily used by Xcode, in which, instead
of listing all input files on the command line, the input file paths are
written to a text file and the path of that text file is passed to the linker
with the -filelist option (similar to @file).
In order to make test cases for this, I generalized the -test_libresolution
option to become -test_file_usage.
llvm-svn: 215762
Darwin has a packaging mechanism for shared libraries and headers called
frameworks. A directory Foo.framework contains a shared library binary file
"Foo" and a subdirectory "Headers". Most OS frameworks are all in one
directory /System/Library/Frameworks/. As a linking convenience, the linker
option "-framework Foo" means search the framework directories specified
with -F (analogous to -L) looking for a shared library Foo.framework/Foo.
llvm-svn: 215680
In general two-level namespace means each program records exactly which dylib
each undefined (imported) symbol comes from. But, sometimes the implementor
wants to hide the implementation dylib. For instance libSytem.dylib is the base
dylib all Darwin programs must link with. A few years ago it was split up
into two dozen dylibs by all are hidden behind libSystem.dylib which re-exports
each sub-dylib. All clients still think libSystem.dylib is the implementor.
To support this, the linker must load "indirect" dylibs and not just the
"direct" dylibs specified on the command line. This is done in the
createImplicitFiles() method after all command line specified files are
loaded. Since an indirect dylib may have already been loaded as a direct dylib
(or indirectly via a previous direct dylib), the MachOLinkingContext keeps
a list of all loaded dylibs.
With this change hello world can now be linked against the real OS or SDK.
llvm-svn: 215605
The -sectalign option is used to increase the alignment required for a section.
It required some reworking of how the __TEXT segment is laid out because that
segment also contains the mach_header and load commands. And the size of load
commands depend on the number of segments, sections, and dependent dylibs used.
Using this option will simplify some future test cases because the final
address of code can be pinned down, making tests of its content easier.
llvm-svn: 214268
These behave slightly idiosyncratically in the best of cases, and have
additional hacks layered on top of that for compatibility with badly behaved
build systems (via ld64).
For -lXYZ:
+ If XYZ is actually XY.o then search all library paths for XY.o
+ Otherwise search all library paths, first for libXYZ.dylib, then libXYZ.a
+ By default the library paths are /usr/lib and /usr/local/lib in that order.
For -syslibroot:
+ -syslibroot options apply to absolute paths in the search order.
+ All -syslibroot prefixes that exist are added to the search path *instead*
of the original.
+ If no -syslibroot prefixed path exists, the original is kept.
+ Hacks^WExceptions:
+ If only 1 -syslibroot is given and doesn't contain /usr/lib or
/usr/local/lib, that path is dropped entirely. (rdar://problem/6438270).
+ If the last -syslibroot is "/", all of them are ignored entirely.
(rdar://problem/5829579).
At least, that's my best interpretation of what ld64 does in buildSearchPaths.
llvm-svn: 212706
Before this patch, name of driver implementation is not consistent with its
option table file. Specifically, LDOptions has a different prefix than
GnuLdDriver.
This patch renames option files, so that the option files have the same prefix
as the corresponding driver files.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1591
llvm-svn: 189895