Only MipsThunk were using the function, and the way how it wrote
thunk contents was different from ARM thunks. This patch makes
them consistent.
llvm-svn: 274997
Although they are in the same .cpp file, the way they were written
were slightly different, so they looked more different than they were.
This patch makes their styles consistent.
llvm-svn: 274996
Symbol's dtors are not called because they are allocated using
BumpPtrAllocators. So, members of std::unique_ptr type are not
freed when symbols are deallocated.
This patch is to allocate Thunks using BumpPtrAllocators.
llvm-svn: 274896
The TinyPtrVector of const Thunk<ELFT>* in InputSections.h can cause
build failures on certain compiler/library combinations when Thunk<ELFT>
is not a complete type or is an abstract class. Fixed by making Thunk<ELFT>
non Abstract.
type or is an abstract class
llvm-svn: 274863
Generalise the Mips LA25 Thunk code and implement ARM and Thumb
interworking Thunks.
- Introduce a new module Thunks.cpp to store the Target Specific Thunk
implementations.
- DefinedRegular and Shared have a ThunkData field to record Thunk.
- A Target can have more than one type of Thunk.
- Support PC-relative calls to Thunks.
- Support Thunks to PLT entries.
- Existing Mips LA25 Thunk code integrated.
- Support for ARMv7A interworking Thunks.
Limitations:
- Only one Thunk per SymbolBody, this is sufficient for all currently
implemented Thunks.
- ARM thunks assume presence of V6T2 MOVT and MOVW instructions.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21891
llvm-svn: 274836
When building executable usually version script is absent.
Before this patch error was shown in the case when
symbol name contained version and there was no script to match it.
Instead of error out patch allows
to create new version declaration in this case and use it.
gnu linkers do the same.
That is PR28359.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21890
llvm-svn: 274828
Previously, it was not tested because the test was written in
a way that it passed on a platform that does not support
abi::__cxa_demangle. Now we restrict this test to Unix (by adding
"REQUIRES: shell") and assume that it always demangle symbols.
Thanks to Davide to find out the issue.
llvm-svn: 274808
Symbols.cpp contains functions to handle ELF symbols.
demangle() function is essentially a function to work on a
string rather than on an ELF symbol. So Strings.cpp is a
better place to put that function.
This change also make demangle to demangle symbols unconditionally.
Previously, it demangled symbols only when Config->Demangle is true.
llvm-svn: 274804
Previously we had incorrect logic here. Imagine we would have the next script:
LIBSAMPLE_1.0
{
global:
a_2;
local:
*;
};
LIBSAMPLE_2.0
{
global:
a*;
};
According to previous logic it would assign version 1 to a_2 and then
would try to reassign it to version 2 because of applying wildcard a*.
And show a warning about that.
Generally Ian Lance Tailor wrote about next rules that should be applied:
(http://www.airs.com/blog/archives/300)
Here are the current rules for gold:
"If there is an exact match for the mangled name, we use it. If there is more than one exact match, we give a warning, and we use the first tag in the script which matches. If a symbol has an exact match as both global and local for the same version tag, we give an error.
Otherwise, we look for an extern C++ or an extern Java exact match. If we find an exact match, we use it. If there is more than one exact match, we give a warning, and we use the first tag in the script which matches. If a symbol has an exact match as both global and local for the same version tag, we give an error.
Otherwise, we look through the wildcard patterns, ignoring “*” patterns. We look through the version tags in reverse order. For each version tag, we look through the global patterns and then the local patterns. We use the first match we find (i.e., the last matching version tag in the file).
Otherwise, we use the “*” pattern if there is one. We give a warning if there are multiple “*” patterns."
Patch makes wildcard matching to be in revered order and to follow after the regular naming matching.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21894
llvm-svn: 274739
Previously, ch_size was read in host byte order, so if a host and
a target are different in byte order, we would produce a corrupted
output.
llvm-svn: 274729
The build otherwise fails with:
[ 39%] Building CXX object
tools/lld/ELF/CMakeFiles/lldELF.dir/OutputSections.cpp.o
/export/gnu/import/git/llvm/tools/lld/ELF/OutputSections.cpp: In
member function ‘void
lld:🧝:GnuHashTableSection<ELFT>::addSymbols(std::vector<std::pair<lld:🧝:SymbolBody*,
long unsigned int> >&)’:
/export/gnu/import/git/llvm/tools/lld/ELF/OutputSections.cpp:585:8:
error: inconsistent deduction for ‘auto’: ‘auto’ and then
‘__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<std::pair<lld:🧝:SymbolBody*, long
unsigned int>*, std::vector<std::pair<lld:🧝:SymbolBody*, long
unsigned int> > >’
Reported by: H. J. Liu
llvm-svn: 274518
This is PR28358
According to
https://www.akkadia.org/drepper/dsohowto.pdf
"The fourth point, the VERS 1.0 version being referred to in the VERS 2.0 definition, is not really important in symbol versioning. It marks the predecessor relationship of the two versions and it is done to maintain the similar- ities with Solaris’ internal versioning. It does not cause any problem it might in fact be useful to a human reader so predecessors should always be mentioned."
Patch partially reverts 273423 "[ELF] - Implemented version script hierarchies.",
version references are just ignored now.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21888
llvm-svn: 274345
In general, we accept both -foo and --foo as command line options,
but if an option is a single letter option, we don't want to allow
double dashes because GNU linkers don't accept such combination.
llvm-svn: 274219