-N (-omagic)
Set the text and data sections to be readable and writable.
Also, do not page-align the data segment.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26888
llvm-svn: 288123
That unifies handling cases when we have SECTIONS and when
-no-rosegment is given in compareSectionsNonScript()
Now Config->SingleRoRx is used for check, testcase is provided.
llvm-svn: 288022
--no-rosegment: Do not put read-only non-executable sections in their own segment
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26889
llvm-svn: 288020
Unfortunatelly PT_ARM_EXIDX is special. There is no way to create it
from linker scripts, so we have to create it even if PHDRS is used.
This matches bfd and is required for the lld output to survive bfd's strip.
llvm-svn: 288012
Unfortunatelly some scripts look like
kernphys = ...
. = ....
and the expectation in that every orphan section is after the
assignment.
llvm-svn: 287996
This is an horrible special case, but seems to match bfd's behaviour
and is important for avoiding placing an orphan section before the
expected start of the file.
llvm-svn: 287994
-color-diagnostics=auto is default because that's the same as
Clang's default. When color is enabled, error or warning messages
are colored like this.
error:
<bold>ld.lld</bold> <red>error:</red> foo.o: no such file
warning:
<bold>ld.lld</bold> <magenta>warning:</magenta> foo.o: no such file
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27117
llvm-svn: 287949
This is important for cases like:
.sdata : {
*(.got.plt .got)
...
}
That was not supported before as there was no way to get access to
synthetic sections from script.
More details on review page.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27040
llvm-svn: 287913
This patch changes the error message from
too many errors emitted, stopping now
to
too many errors emitted, stopping now (use -error-limit=0 to see all errors)
Thanks for Sean for the suggestion!
llvm-svn: 287900
The .ARM.exidx table has an entry for each function with the first entry
giving the start address of the function, the table is sorted in ascending
order of function address. Given a PC value, the unwinder will search the
table for the entry that contains the PC value.
If the table entry happens to be the last, the range of the addresses that
the final unwinding table describes will extend to the end of the address
space. To prevent an incorrect address outside the address range of the
program matching the last entry we follow ld.bfd's example and add a
sentinel EXIDX_CANTUNWIND entry at the end of the table. This gives the
final real table entry an upper bound.
In addition the llvm libunwind unwinder currently depends on the presence
of a sentinel entry (PR31091).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26977
llvm-svn: 287869
Previously, if a symbol specified by -e or ENTRY() is not found,
we didn't set entry point address. That is incompatible with GNU
because GNU linkers set the first address of .text to entry.
This patch implement that behavior.
llvm-svn: 287836
Offset between beginning of a .got section and _gp symbols used in MIPS
GOT relocations calculations. Usually the expression looks like
VA + Offset - GP, where VA is the .got section address, Offset - offset
of the GOT entry, GP - offset between .got and _gp. Also there two "magic"
symbols _gp_disp and __gnu_local_gp which hold the offset mentioned above.
These symbols might be referenced by MIPS relocations.
Now the linker always defines _gp symbol and uses hardcoded value for
its initialization. So offset between .got and _gp is 0x7ff0. The _gp_disp
and __gnu_local_gp defined if required and initialized by 0x7ff0.
In fact that is not correct because _gp symbol might be defined by a linker
script and holds arbitrary value. In that case we need to use this value
in relocation calculation and initialize _gp_disp and __gnu_local_gp
properly.
The patch fixes the problem and completes fixing the bug #30311.
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30311
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27036
llvm-svn: 287832
This is in the context of https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31109.
When LLD prints out errors for relocations, it tends to print out
extremely large number of errors (like millions) because it would
print out one error per relocation.
This patch makes LLD bail out if it prints out more than 20 errors.
You can configure the limitation using -error-limit argument.
-error-limit=0 means no limit.
I chose the flag name because Clang has the same feature as -ferror-limit.
"f" doesn't make sense to us, so I omitted it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26981
llvm-svn: 287789
Align to the large page size (known as a superpage or huge page).
FreeBSD automatically promotes large, superpage-aligned allocations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27042
llvm-svn: 287782
An upcoming change to the image base address for x86-64 (D27042) will
will change some addresses and hence the instruction encodings. We care
about the disassembled instructions, not their encodings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27056
llvm-svn: 287778
Now that lld switched to lib/LTO, which always calls setDataLayout(),
we don't need this check anymore.
Thanks to Peter for pointing out!
llvm-svn: 287699
GNU LD allows `ASSERT` commands to be in output section descriptions.
Note that LD also mandates that `ASSERT` commands in this context must
end with a semicolon.
llvm-svn: 287677
If the linker script has SECTIONS, the address computation is now
always done in LinkerScript::assignAddresses, like for any other
section.
Before fixHeaders would do a tentative computation that
assignAddresses would sometimes override.
This patch also splits the cases where assignAddresses needs to add
the headers to the first PT_LOAD and the address computation. The net
effect is that we no longer create an empty page for no reason in the
included test case, which matches bfd behavior.
llvm-svn: 287565
Previously, we discarded .debug$ sections. This patch adds them to
files so that PDB.cpp can access them.
This patch also adds a debug option, /dumppdb, to dump debug info
fed to createPDB so that we can verify that valid data has been passed.
llvm-svn: 287555
LLD's error messages contain line numbers, function names or section names.
Currently they are formatter as follows.
foo.c (32): symbol 'foo' not found
foo.c (function bar): symbol 'foo' not found
foo.c (.text+0x1234): symbol 'foo' not found
This patch changes them so that they are consistent with Clang's output.
foo.c:32: symbol 'foo' not found
foo.c:(function bar): symbol 'foo' not found
foo.c:(.text+0x1234): symbol 'foo' not found
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26901
llvm-svn: 287537
GNU linkers disagree here.
Though both -version and -v are mentioned
in help to print the version information, GNU ld just normally exits,
while gold can continue linking. We are compatible with ld.bfd here.
This fixes PR31057.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26865
llvm-svn: 287448
Since the output has a section table too, it is meaningful to compute
the sh_link. In a more practical note, the binutils' strip crashes if
sh_link is not set for SHT_ARM_EXIDX.
llvm-svn: 287280
I hit an internal linker script that was defining _DYNAMIC instead of
letting the linker do it. It turns out that both bfd and gold allow
that.
This is pretty easy to implement, just make the linker defined symbol
weak. This should have no impact in the case where there is no user
defined symbol: The visibility is hidden, which causes the output to
still be local.
llvm-svn: 287260
Linker script doesn't create a section if it has no content. So the following
script doesn't create .norelocs section if it doesn't have any .rel* sections.
.norelocs : { *(.rel*) }
Later, if you assert that the size of .norelocs is 0, LLD printed out
an error message, because it didn't allow calling SIZEOF() on nonexistent
sections.
This patch allows SIZEOF() on nonexistent sections, so that you can do
something like this.
ASSERT(SIZEOF(.norelocs), "shouldn't contain .rel sections!")
Note that this behavior is compatible with GNU.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26810
llvm-svn: 287257
Apparently this is wrong because it's legal to have a filename
on UNIX which contains a backslash.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26734
llvm-svn: 287143