Currently, it was delibrately impleneted to not handle this case, but as it has turnt out, we need this feature.
The concrete use case is
`System/Library/Frameworks/Cocoa.framework/Versions/A/Cocoa` reexports
/System/Library/Frameworks/AppKit.framework/Versions/C/AppKit , which then rexports
/System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/UIFoundation.framework/Versions/A/UIFoundation
The current implemention uses a global currentTopLevelTapi, which is not reset until it finishes loading the whole tree.
This is a problem because if the top-level is set to Cocoa, then when we get to UIFoundation, it will try to find UIFoundation in the current top level, which is Cocoa and will not find it.
The right thing should be:
- When loading a library from a TBD file, re-exports need to be looked up in the auxiliary documents within the same TBD.
- When loading from an actual dylib, no additional TBD documents need to be examined.
- In no case does a re-export mentioned in one TBD file need to be looked up in a document in an auxiliary document from a different TBD file
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97438
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95913
Usage: -bundle_loader <executable>
This option specifies the executable that will load the build output file being linked.
When building a bundle, users can use the --bundle_loader to specify an executable
that contains symbols referenced, but not implemented in the bundle.
This extends {D92539} to work even when we are loading archive
members via `-force_load`. I uncovered this issue while trying to
force-load archives containing bitcode -- we were segfaulting.
In addition to fixing the `-force_load` case, this diff also addresses
the behavior of `-ObjC` when LTO bitcode is involved -- we need to
force-load those archive members if they contain ObjC categories.
Reviewed By: #lld-macho, smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95265
clang puts `-framework CoreFoundation` in this load command for files
that use @available / __builtin_available. Without support for this,
binaries that don't explicitly link to CoreFoundation fail to link.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92624
The problem was that `sym` became replaced in the call
to make<ObjFile> and referring to it afer that read memory that now
stored a different kind of symbol (a Defined instead of a LazySymbol).
Since this happens only once per archive, just copy the symbol to the
stack before make<ObjFile> and read the copy instead.
Originally reviewed at https://reviews.llvm.org/D92496
This is useful for debugging why lld loads .o files it shouldn't load.
It's also useful for users of lld -- I've used ld64's version of this a
few times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92496
We should also set the modtime when running LTO. That will be done in a
future diff, together with support for the `-object_path_lto` flag.
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91318
This adds support for ld.lld's --reproduce / lld-link's /reproduce:
flag to the MachO port. This flag can be added to a link command
to make the link write a tar file containing all inputs to the link
and a response file containing the link command. This can be used
to reproduce the link on another machine, which is useful for sharing
bug report inputs or performance test loads.
Since the linker is usually called through the clang driver and
adding linker flags can be a bit cumbersome, setting the env var
`LLD_REPRODUCE=foo.tar` triggers the feature as well.
The file response.txt in the archive can be used with
`ld64.lld.darwinnew $(cat response.txt)` as long as the contents are
smaller than the command-line limit, or with `ld64.lld.darwinnew
@response.txt` once D92149 is in.
The support in this patch is sufficient to create a tar file for
Chromium's base_unittests that can link after unpacking on a different
machine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92274
This is a complete Options.td compiled from ld(1) dated 2018-03-07 and
cross checked with ld64 source code version 512.4 dated 2018-03-18.
This is the first in a series of diffs for argument handling. Follow-ups
will include switch cases for all the new instances of `OPT_foo`, and
parsing/validation of arguments attached to options, e.g., more code
akin to `OPT_platform_version` and associated `parsePlatformVersion()`.
Reviewed By: smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80582
Summary:
This is the first commit for the new Mach-O backend, designed to roughly
follow the architecture of the existing ELF and COFF backends, and
building off work that @ruiu and @pcc did in a branch a while back. Note
that this is a very stripped-down commit with the bare minimum of
functionality for ease of review. We'll be following up with more diffs
soon.
Currently, we're able to generate a simple "Hello World!" executable
that runs on OS X Catalina (and possibly on earlier OS X versions; I
haven't tested them). (This executable can be obtained by compiling
`test/MachO/relocations.s`.) We're mocking out a few load commands to
achieve this -- for example, we can't load dynamic libraries, but
Catalina requires binaries to be linked against `dyld`, so we hardcode
the emission of a `LC_LOAD_DYLIB` command. Other mocked out load
commands include LC_SYMTAB and LC_DYSYMTAB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75382