This caused some tests to fail on FreeBSD, and Mac OS X.
Some std::sort() implementations will check for strict-weak-ordering
by comparing with the same element, or will compare an element to
itself for 1-element sequence. Take care of this case. Thanks to
chandlerc for explaning that to me.
Reviewed by: ruiu
llvm-svn: 227709
This is needed, among others by the FreeBSD kernel linker script.
Patch by Davide Italiano!
Reviewers: ruiu, rafaelauler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7220
llvm-svn: 227694
These fields were made protected in r193585. The aim of that change is to
expose these fields to SimpleFileWrapper. Because SimpleFileWrapper class
was removed in r227549, we can make them private.
llvm-svn: 227672
Previously we applied the LayoutPass to order atoms and then
apply elf::ArrayOrderPass to sort them again. The first pass is
basically supposed to sort atoms in the normal fashion (which
is to sort symbols in the same order as the input files).
The second pass sorts atoms in {init,fini}_array.<priority> by
priority.
The problem is that the LayoutPass is overkill. It analyzes
references between atoms to make a decision how to sort them.
It's slow, hard to understand, and above all, it doesn't seem
that we need its feature for ELF in the first place.
This patch remove the LayoutPass from ELF pass list. Now all
reordering is done in elf::OrderPass. That pass sorts atoms by
{init,fini}_array, and if they are not in the special section,
they are ordered as the same order as they appear in the command
line. The new code is far easier to understand, faster, and
still able to create valid executables.
Unlike the previous layout pass, elf::OrderPass doesn't count
any attributes of an atom (e.g. permissions) except its
position. It's OK because the writer takes care of them if we
have to.
This patch changes the order of final output, although that's
benign. Tests are updated.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7278
llvm-svn: 227666
SimpleFileWrapper was a class to wrap an existing (possibly non-mutable)
file as a mutable file. We used instances of the class in RoundTrip*
passes, because the passes convert mutable files to non-mutable files,
and we needed to convert them back to mutable.
That feature can be implemented without defining a new class. Generally
speaking, if we can implement a feature without defining a class and
using only public interface of exsiting classes, that's preferred way
to do that. And this is the case.
llvm-svn: 227549
The LayoutPass is one of the slowest pass. This change is to skip
that pass. This change not only improve performance but also improve
maintainability of the code because the LayoutPass is pretty complex.
Previously we used the LayoutPass to sort all atoms in a specific way,
and reorder them again for PE/COFF in GroupedSectionPass.
I spent time on improving and fixing bugs in the LayoutPass (e.g.
r193029), but the pass is still hard to understand and hard to use.
It's better not to depend on that if we don't need. For PE/COFF, we
just wanted to sort atoms in the same order as the file order in the
command line.
The feature we used in the LayoutPass is now simplified to
compareByPosition function in OrderPass.cpp. The function is just 5
lines.
This patch changes the order of final output because it changes the
sort order a bit. The output is still correct, though.
llvm-svn: 227500
That kind of reference was used only in ELFFile, and the use of
that reference there didn't seem to make sense. All test still
pass (after adjusting symbol names) without that code. LLD is
still be able to link LLD and Clang. Looks like we just don't
need this.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7189
llvm-svn: 227259
Misread buildbot's log.
Both gcc and clang compile this fine.
Original fix reason:
gcc allows template specializations only in the same namespace
where template has been declared.
llvm-svn: 227183
Symbols addressing Thumb code have zero bit set in st_value to distinguish them from ARM instructions.
This caused wrong atoms' forming because of offset of one byte brought in by that corrected st_value.
Fixed reading of st_value & st_value-related things in ARMELFFile while forming atoms.
Symbol table generation is also fixed for Thumb atoms.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7161
llvm-svn: 227174
Anonymous atoms created there were getting wrong atom ordinal.
LayoutAfter references take precedence over atom ordinals, so
the bug was not visible, though.
llvm-svn: 227168
* Removed cyclic dependency between lldPECOFF and lldDriver
* Added missing dependencies in unit tests
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7185
llvm-svn: 227134
Time to link lld using lld improved from 5.7s to 5.4s on Windows.
It's not a significant improvement but not bad for one-line change.
This patch includes a bug fix for Parallel.h as the original code
uses operator< instead of a compare function there.
llvm-svn: 227132
This is initial patch to support MIPS64 object files linking.
The patch just makes some classes more generalized, and rejects
attempts to interlinking O32 and N64 ABI object files.
I try to reuse the current MIPS target related classes as much as
possible because O32 and N64 MIPS ABI are tightly related and share
almost the same set of relocations, GOT, flags etc.
llvm-svn: 227058