For now the Archive owns the buffers of the thin archive members.
This makes for a simple API, but all the buffers are destructed
only when the archive is destructed. This should be fine since we
close the files after mmap so we should not hit an open file
limit.
llvm-svn: 242215
It looks like ld64 requires it. With this we seem to be able to bootstrap using
llvm-ar+/usr/bin/true instead of ar+ranlib (currently on stage2).
llvm-svn: 241842
The gnu ar format uses BE numbers. The BSD one uses LE. Add a helper for one or the
other. NFC for now, just removes some noise from the following patch.
llvm-svn: 241808
No support for the symbol table yet (but will hopefully add it today).
We always use the long filename format so that we can align the member,
which is an advantage of the BSD format.
llvm-svn: 241721
getSymbolValue now returns a value that in convenient for most callers:
* 0 for undefined
* symbol size for common symbols
* offset/address for symbols the rest
Code that needs something more specific can check getSymbolFlags.
llvm-svn: 241605
At least not in the interface exposed by ObjectFile. This matches what ELF and
COFF implement.
Adjust existing code that was expecting them to have values. No overall
functionality change intended.
Another option would be to change the interface and the ELF and COFF
implementations to say that the value of a common symbol is its size.
llvm-svn: 241593
They are implemented like that in some object formats, but for the interface
provided by lib/Object, SF_Undefined and SF_Common are different things.
This matches the ELF and COFF implementation and fixes llvm-nm for MachO.
llvm-svn: 241587
In these two contexts we really just want the raw n_value. No need to use
getSymbolValue which checks for special cases where, semantically, the symbol
has no value.
llvm-svn: 241584
Originally added in r139314.
Back then it didn't actually get the address, it got whatever value the
relocation used: address or offset.
The values in different object formats are:
* MachO: Always an offset.
* COFF: Always an address, but when talking about the virtual address of
sections it says: "for simplicity, compilers should set this to zero".
* ELF: An offset for .o files and and address for .so files. In the case of the
.so, the relocation in not linked to any section (sh_info is 0). We can't
really compute an offset.
Some API mappings would be:
* Use getAddress for everything. It would be quite cumbersome. To compute the
address elf has to follow sh_info, which can be corrupted and therefore the
method has to return an ErrorOr. The address of the section is also the same
for every relocation in a section, so we shouldn't have to check the error
and fetch the value for every relocation.
* Use a getValue and make it up to the user to know what it is getting.
* Use a getOffset and:
* Assert for dynamic ELF objects. That is a very peculiar case and it is
probably fair to ask any tool that wants to support it to use ELF.h. The
only tool we have that reads those (llvm-readobj) already does that. The
only other use case I can think of is a dynamic linker.
* Check that COFF .obj files have sections with zero virtual address spaces. If
it turns out that some assembler/compiler produces these, we can change
COFFObjectFile::getRelocationOffset to subtract it. Given COFF format,
this can be done without the need for ErrorOr.
The getRelocationAddress method was never implemented for COFF. It also
had exactly one use in a very peculiar case: a shortcut for adding the
section value to a pcrel reloc on MachO.
Given that, I don't expect that there is any use out there of the C API. If
that is not the case, let me know and I will add it back with the implementation
inlined and do a proper deprecation.
llvm-svn: 241450
When talking about the virtual address of sections the coff spec says:
... for simplicity, compilers should set this to zero. Otherwise, it is an
arbitrary value that is subtracted from offsets during relocation.
We don't currently subtract it, so check that it is zero.
If some producer does create such files, we can change getRelocationOffset
instead.
llvm-svn: 241447
SHT_NOBITS sections do not have content in an object file. Now the yaml2obj
tool does not accept `Content` field for such sections, and the obj2yaml
tool does not attempt to read the section content from a file.
Restore r241350 and r241352.
llvm-svn: 241377
r241350 broke lld tests.
r241352 depends on r241350.
Original messages:
"[ELFYAML] Fix handling SHT_NOBITS sections by obj2yaml/yaml2obj tools"
"[ELFYAML] Make the Size field for .bss section optional"
llvm-svn: 241354
SHT_NOBITS sections do not have content in an object file. Now yaml2obj
tool does not accept `Content` field for such sections, and obj2yaml
tool does not attempt to read the section content from a file.
llvm-svn: 241350
This function can really fail since the string table offset can be out of
bounds.
Using ErrorOr makes sure the error is checked.
Hopefully a lot of the boilerplate code in tools/* can go away once we have
a diagnostic manager in Object.
llvm-svn: 241297
This also improves the logic of what is an error:
* getSection(uint_32): only return an error if the index is out of bounds. The
index 0 corresponds to a perfectly valid entry.
* getSection(Elf_Sym): Returns null for symbols that normally don't have
sections and error for out of bound indexes.
In many places this just moves the report_fatal_error up the stack, but those
can then be fixed in smaller patches.
llvm-svn: 241156
If you only need Name and Value fields in the COFF symbol,
you don't need to distinguish 32 bit and 64 bit COFF symbols.
These fields start at the same offsets and have the same size.
This data strucutre is one pointer smaller than COFFSymbolRef
thus slightly efficient. I'll use this class in LLD as we create
millions of LLD symbol objects that currently contain COFFSymbolRef.
Shaving off 8 byte (or 4 byte on 32 bit) from that class actually
matters becasue of the number of objects we create in LLD.
llvm-svn: 241024
This moves the error checking for string tables to getStringTable which returns
an ErrorOr<StringRef>.
This improves error checking, makes it uniform across all string tables and
makes it possible to check them once instead of once per name.
llvm-svn: 240950
This is still a really odd function. Most calls are in object format specific
contexts and should probably be replaced with a more direct query, but at least
now this is not too obnoxious to use.
llvm-svn: 240777
On ELF that was already the case since getting the size of a symbol
never fails.
On MachO and COFF we could fail trying to get the section of a symbol. But
we don't really need the section, just the section number to know if two
symbols are in the same section or not.
llvm-svn: 240580
This returns either the symbol offset or address. Since it is not defined which
one, it never has to lookup the section and so never fails.
I will add users in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 240569
COFF and MachO only define symbol sizes for common symbols. Reflect that
in the class hierarchy by having a method for common symbols only in the base
and a general one in ELF.
This avoids the need of using a magic value for the size, which had a few
problems
* Most callers didn't check for it.
* The ones that did could not tell the magic value from a file actually having
that value.
llvm-svn: 240529
Summary:
That way llvm-objdump can rely on it without adding an extra dependency
on CodeGen.
This change duplicates the FaultKind enum and the code that serializes
it to a string. I could not figure out a way to get around this without
adding a new dependency to Object
Reviewers: rafael, ab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10619
llvm-svn: 240364
The reason we need to search by name rather than by Triple::ArchType
is to handle subarchitecture correclty. There is no different ArchType
for the x86_64h architecture (it identifies itself as x86_64), or for
the various ARM subarches. The only way to get to the subarch slice
in an universal binary is to search by name.
This issue led to hard to debug and transient symbolication failures
in Asan tests (it mostly works, because the files are very similar).
This also affects the Profiling infrastucture as it is the other user
of that API.
Reviewers: samsonov, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10604
llvm-svn: 240339
There are 3 types of relocations on MachO
* Scattered
* Section based
* Symbol based
On ELF and COFF relocations are symbol based.
We were in the strange situation that we abstracted over two of them. This makes
section based relocations MachO only.
llvm-svn: 240149
The patch is generated using this command:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
llvm/lib/
Thanks to Eugene Kosov for the original patch!
llvm-svn: 240137
In a relocation target can take 3 basic forms
* A r_value in scattered relocations.
* A symbol in external relocations.
* A section is non-external relocations.
Have the dump reflect that. With this change we go from
CHECK-NEXT: Extern: 0
CHECK-NEXT: Type: X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR (5)
CHECK-NEXT: Symbol: 0x2
CHECK-NEXT: Scattered: 0
To just
// CHECK-NEXT: Type: X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR (5)
// CHECK-NEXT: Section: __data (2)
Since the relocation is with a section, we print the seciton name and don't
need to say that it is not scattered or external.
Someone motivated can add further special cases for things like
ARM64_RELOC_ADDEND and ARM_RELOC_PAIR.
llvm-svn: 240073
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
The first time this was committed it accidentally fixed an inconsistency in
triples in llvm-mc and this caused a failure. This inconsistency was fixed in
r239808.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239812
`LLVM_ENABLE_MODULES` builds sometimes fail because `Intrinsics.td`
needs to regenerate `Instrinsics.h` before anyone can include anything
from the LLVM_IR module. Represent the dependency explicitly to prevent
that.
llvm-svn: 239796
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar trivial patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239721
As noted on Errc.h:
// * std::errc is just marked with is_error_condition_enum. This means that
// common patters like AnErrorCode == errc::no_such_file_or_directory take
// 4 virtual calls instead of two comparisons.
And on some libstdc++ those virtual functions conclude that
------------------------
int main() {
std::error_code foo = std::make_error_code(std::errc::no_such_file_or_directory);
return foo == std::errc::no_such_file_or_directory;
}
-------------------------
should exit with 0.
llvm-svn: 239683
We cannot prepend __imp_ in the IR mangler because a function reference may
be emitted unmangled in a constant initializer. The linker is expected to
resolve such references to thunks. This is covered by the new test case.
Strictly speaking we ought to emit two undefined symbols, one with __imp_ and
one without, as we cannot know which symbol the final object file will refer
to. However, this would require rather intrusive changes to IRObjectFile,
and lld works fine without it for now.
This reimplements r239437, which was reverted in r239502.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10400
llvm-svn: 239560
make_error_code(object_error) is slow because object::object_category()
uses a ManagedStatic variable. But the real problem is that the function is
called too frequently. This patch uses std::error_code() instead of
object_error::success. In most cases, we return "success", so this patch
reduces number of function calls to that function.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10333
llvm-svn: 239409
No functional change intended, other than some minor changes to certain
diagnostics.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10296
llvm-svn: 239278
Report proper error code from MachOObjectFile constructor if we
can't parse another segment load command (we already return a proper
error if segment load command contents is suspicious).
llvm-svn: 239109
Summary:
Properly report the error in segment load commands from MachOObjectFile
constructor instead of crashing the program.
Adjust the test case accordingly.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael, filcab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239081
Summary:
Currently all load commands are parsed in MachOObjectFile constructor.
If the next load command cannot be parsed, or if command size is too
small, properly report it through the error code and fail to construct
the object, instead of crashing the program.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael, filcab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239080
Summary: Instead, properly report this error from MachOObjectFile constructor.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239078
Summary:
Avoid parsing object file each time MachOObjectFile::getHeader() is
called. Instead, cache the header in MachOObjectFile constructor, where
it's parsed anyway. In future, we must avoid constructing the object
at all if the header can't be parsed.
Test Plan: regression test suite.
Reviewers: rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239075
Summary:
Now users don't have to manually deal with getFirstLoadCommandInfo() /
getNextLoadCommandInfo(), calculate the number of load segments, etc.
No functionality change.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael, lhames, loladiro
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10144
llvm-svn: 238983
This commit adds partial support for MachO relocations to RelocVisitor.
A simple test case is added to show that relocations are indeed being
applied and that using llvm-dwarfdump on MachO files no longer errors.
Correctness is not yet tested, due to an unrelated bug in DebugInfo,
which will be fixed with appropriate testcase in a followup commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8148
llvm-svn: 238663
MachO and COFF quite reasonably only define the size for common symbols.
We used to try to figure out the "size" by computing the gap from one symbol to
the next.
This would not be correct in general, since a part of a section can belong to no
visible symbol (padding, private globals).
It was also really expensive, since we would walk every symbol to find the size
of one.
If a caller really wants this, it can sort all the symbols once and get all the
gaps ("size") in O(n log n) instead of O(n^2).
On MachO this also has the advantage of centralizing all the checks for an
invalid n_sect.
llvm-svn: 238028
Summary:
This supersedes http://reviews.llvm.org/D4010, hopefully properly
dealing with the JIT case and also adds an actual test case.
DwarfContext was basically already usable for the JIT (and back when
we were overwriting ELF files it actually worked out of the box by
accident), but in order to resolve relocations correctly it needs
to know the load address of the section.
Rather than trying to get this out of the ObjectFile or requiring
the user to create a new ObjectFile just to get some debug info,
this adds the capability to pass in that info directly.
As part of this I separated out part of the LoadedObjectInfo struct
from RuntimeDyld, since it is now required at a higher layer.
Reviewers: lhames, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: vtjnash, friss, rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6961
llvm-svn: 237961
This starts merging MCSection and MCSectionData.
There are a few issues with the current split between MCSection and
MCSectionData.
* It optimizes the the not as important case. We want the production
of .o files to be really fast, but the split puts the information used
for .o emission in a separate data structure.
* The ELF/COFF/MachO hierarchy is not represented in MCSectionData,
leading to some ad-hoc ways to represent the various flags.
* It makes it harder to remember where each item is.
The attached patch starts merging the two by moving the alignment from
MCSectionData to MCSection.
Most of the patch is actually just dropping 'const', since
MCSectionData is mutable, but MCSection was not.
llvm-svn: 237936
CloudABI is a POSIX-like runtime environment built around the concept of
capability-based security. More details:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
CloudABI uses its own ELFOSABI number. This number has been allocated by
the maintainers of ELF a couple of days ago.
Reviewed by: echristo
llvm-svn: 231681
Provide basic support for dynamically loadable coff objects. Only handles a subset of x64 currently.
Patch by Andy Ayers!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7793
llvm-svn: 231574
Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.
As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().
Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module
The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.
Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
A null MCTargetStreamer allows IRObjectFile to ignore target-specific
directives. Previously we were crashing.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7711
llvm-svn: 229797
The 64-bit MIPS ELF archive file format is used by MIPS64 targets.
The main difference from a regular archive file is the symbol table format:
1. ar_name is equal to "/SYM64/"
2. number of symbols and offsets are 64-bit integers
http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/4000/007-4658-001/pdf/007-4658-001.pdf
Page 96
The patch allows reading of such archive files by llvm-nm, llvm-objdump
and other tools. But it does not support archive files with number of symbols
and/or offsets exceed 2^32. I think it is a rather rare case requires more
significant modification of `Archive` class code.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7546
llvm-svn: 229520
This allows IDEs to recognize the entire set of header files for
each of the core LLVM projects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7526
Reviewed By: Chris Bieneman
llvm-svn: 228798
MIPS64 ELF file has a very specific relocation record format. Each
record might specify up to three relocation operations. So the `r_info`
field in fact consists of three relocation type sub-fields and optional
code of "special" symbols.
http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/4000/007-4658-001/pdf/007-4658-001.pdf
page 40
The patch implements support of the MIPS64 relocation record format in
yaml2obj/obj2yaml tools by introducing new optional Relocation fields:
Type2, Type3, and SpecSym. These fields are recognized only if the
object/YAML file relates to the MIPS64 target.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7136
llvm-svn: 227044
Summary:
Shift an older “invalid file” test to get a consistent naming for these tests.
Bugs found by afl-fuzz
Reviewers: rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6945
llvm-svn: 226219
be exported from a dylib if their containing object file were linked into one.
No test case: No command line tools query this flag, and there are no Object
unit tests.
llvm-svn: 226217
utils/sort_includes.py.
I clearly haven't done this in a while, so more changed than usual. This
even uncovered a missing include from the InstrProf library that I've
added. No functionality changed here, just mechanical cleanup of the
include order.
llvm-svn: 225974
Summary: This fixes the exports iterator if the export list is empty.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, kledzik
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6732
llvm-svn: 224563
Also corrected the name of the load command to not end in an ’S’ as well as corrected
the name of the MachO::linker_option_command struct and other places that had the
word option as plural which did not match the Mac OS X headers.
llvm-svn: 224485
Add in definedness checks for shift operators, null checks when
pointers are assumed by the code to be non-null, and explicit
unreachables.
llvm-svn: 224255
These methods are only used by MCJIT and are very specific to it. In fact, they
are also fairly specific to the fact that we have a dynamic linker of
relocatable objects.
llvm-svn: 223964
Instead, walk the obj symbol list in parallel to find the GV. This shouldn't
change anything on ELF where global symbols are not mangled, but it is a step
toward supporting other object formats.
Gold itself is ELF only, but bfd ld supports COFF and the logic in the gold
plugin could be reused on lld.
llvm-svn: 223780
Summary: Add rpath load command support in Mach-O object and update llvm-objdump to use it.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6512
llvm-svn: 223343
llvm-objdump printed out an error message for this off-by-one error,
but because it always exits with 0 whether or not it found an error,
the test (llvm-objdump/coff-many-relocs.test) succeeded.
I made llvm-objdump exit with EXIT_FAILURE when an error is found.
llvm-svn: 222852
We can now use the ELF relocation .def files to create the mapping
of relocation numbers to names and avoid having to duplicate the
list of relocations.
Patch by Will Newton.
llvm-svn: 222567
We can now use the ELF relocation .def files to create the mapping
of relocation numbers to names and avoid having to duplicate the
list of relocations.
Patch by Will Newton.
llvm-svn: 222566
It printed out base relocation table header as table entry.
This patch also makes llvm-readobj to not skip ABSOLUTE entries
becuase it was confusing.
llvm-svn: 222299
We were a little lax in a few areas:
- We pretended that import libraries were like any old COFF file, they
are not. In fact, they aren't really COFF files at all, we should
probably grow some specialized functionality to handle them smarter.
- Our symbol iterators were more than happy to attempt to go past the
end of the symbol table if you had a symbol with a bad list of
auxiliary symbols.
llvm-svn: 222124
In support of serializing executables, obj2yaml now records the virtual address
and size of sections. It also serializes whatever we strictly need from
the PE header, it expects that it can reconstitute everything else via
inference.
yaml2obj can reconstitute a fully linked executable.
In order to get executables correctly serialized/deserialized, other
bugs were fixed as a circumstance. We now properly respect file and
section alignments. We also avoid writing out string tables unless they
are strictly necessary.
llvm-svn: 221975
Split getObject's smarts into checkOffset, use this to replace the
handwritten check in getSectionContents. Similarly, replace checks in
section_rel_begin/section_rel_end with getNumberOfRelocations.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 221873
lib/Object is supposed to be robust to malformed object files. Don't
assert if we don't have a symbol table. I'll try to come up with a test
case later.
llvm-svn: 221870
getObject didn't consider the case where a pointer came before the start
of the object file. No test is included, trying to come up with
something reasonable.
llvm-svn: 221868
For historical reasons archives on mach-o have two possible names for the
file containing the table of contents for the archive: "__.SYMDEF SORTED"
and "__.SYMDEF". But the libObject archive reader only supported the former.
This patch fixes llvm::object::Archive to support both names.
llvm-svn: 221747
The ELF symbol `st_other` field might contain additional flags besides
visibility ones. This patch implements support for some MIPS specific
flags.
llvm-svn: 221491
mingw lies about the size of a function's AuxFunctionDefinition. Ignore
the field and rely on our heuristic to determine the symbol's size.
llvm-svn: 221485
Use the position of the subsequent symbol in the object file to infer
the size of it's predecessor. I hope to eventually remove whatever COFF
specific details from this little algorithm so that we can unify this
logic with what Mach-O does.
llvm-svn: 221444
To do this, change the representation of lazy loaded functions.
The previous representation cannot differentiate between a function whose body
has been removed and one whose body hasn't been read from the .bc file. That
means that in order to drop a function, the entire body had to be read.
llvm-svn: 220580
This CL introduces MachOObjectFile::getUuid(). This function returns an ArrayRef to the object file's UUID, or an empty ArrayRef if the object file doesn't contain an LC_UUID load command.
The new function is gonna be used by llvm-symbolizer.
llvm-svn: 219866
While getSectionContents was updated to do the right thing,
getSectionSize wasn't. Move the logic to getSectionSize and leverage it
from getSectionContents.
llvm-svn: 219391
It is not useful to return the data beyond VirtualSize it's less than
SizeOfRawData.
An implementation detail of COFF requires the section size to be rounded
up to a multiple of FileAlignment; this means that SizeOfRawData is not
representative of how large the section is. Instead, we should cap it
to VirtualSize when this occurs as it represents the true size of the
section.
Note that this is only relevant in executable files because this
rounding doesn't occur in object files (and VirtualSize is always zero).
llvm-svn: 219388
There are two methods in SectionRef that can fail:
* getName: The index into the string table can be invalid.
* getContents: The section might point to invalid contents.
Every other method will always succeed and returning and std::error_code just
complicates the code. For example, a section can have an invalid alignment,
but if we are able to get to the section structure at all and create a
SectionRef, we will always be able to read that invalid alignment.
llvm-svn: 219314
It can only return null if passed a corrupted reference with a null Ref.p.
Checking for null is then an issue for asserts to check for internal
consistency, not control flow to check for invalid input.
I didn't add an assert(sec != nullptr) because toSec itself has a far more
complete assert.
llvm-svn: 219235
This patch defines a new iterator for the imported symbols.
Make a change to COFFDumper to use that iterator to print
out imported symbols and its ordinals.
llvm-svn: 218915
When the flag is given, the command prints out the COFF import table.
Currently only the import table directory will be printed.
I'm going to make another patch to print out the imported symbols.
The implementation of import directory entry iterator in
COFFObjectFile.cpp was buggy. This patch fixes that too.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5569
llvm-svn: 218891
Users of getSectionContents shouldn't try to pass in BSS or virtual
sections. In all instances, this is a bug in the code calling this
routine.
N.B. Some COFF implementations (like CL) will mark their BSS sections as
taking space on disk. This would confuse COFFObjectFile into thinking
the section is larger than the file.
llvm-svn: 218549
This format is simply a regular object file with the bitcode stored in a
section named ".llvmbc", plus any number of other (non-allocated) sections.
One immediate use case for this is to accommodate compilation processes
which expect the object file to contain metadata in non-allocated sections,
such as the ".go_export" section used by some Go compilers [1], although I
imagine that in the future we could consider compiling parts of the module
(such as large non-inlinable functions) directly into the object file to
improve LTO efficiency.
[1] http://golang.org/doc/install/gccgo#Imports
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4371
llvm-svn: 218078
This finishes the ability of llvm-objdump to print out all information from
the LC_DYLD_INFO load command.
The -bind option prints out symbolic references that dyld must resolve
immediately.
The -lazy-bind option prints out symbolc reference that are lazily resolved on
first use.
The -weak-bind option prints out information about symbols which dyld must
try to coalesce across images.
llvm-svn: 217853
Similar to my previous -exports-trie option, the -rebase option dumps info from
the LC_DYLD_INFO load command. The rebasing info is a list of the the locations
that dyld needs to adjust if a mach-o image is not loaded at its preferred
address. Since ASLR is now the default, images almost never load at their
preferred address, and thus need to be rebased by dyld.
llvm-svn: 217709
This adds support for reading the "bigobj" variant of COFF produced by
cl's /bigobj and mingw's -mbig-obj.
The most significant difference that bigobj brings is more than 2**16
sections to COFF.
bigobj brings a few interesting differences with it:
- It doesn't have a Characteristics field in the file header.
- It doesn't have a SizeOfOptionalHeader field in the file header (it's
only used in executable files).
- Auxiliary symbol records have the same width as a symbol table entry.
Since symbol table entries are bigger, so are auxiliary symbol
records.
Write support will come soon.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5259
llvm-svn: 217496
Summary:
Until r216870 LLVMCreateObjectFile returned nullptr in case of an error,
so callers could check if the call was successful. Now, it always
returns an OwningBinary wrapped as an LLVMObjectFileRef, so callers
can't check if the call was successul.
This results in a segfault running e.g.
llvm-c-test --object-list-sections < /dev/null
So the old behaviour should be restored.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5143
llvm-svn: 217279
I took a guess at the changes to the gold plugin, because that doesn't
seem to build by default for me. Not sure what dependencies I might be
missing for that.
llvm-svn: 217056
This forces callers to use std::move when calling it. It is somewhat odd to have
code with std::move that doesn't always move, but it is also odd to have code
without std::move that sometimes moves.
llvm-svn: 217049
An unpleasant surprise while migrating unique_ptrs (see changes in
lib/Object): ErrorOr<int*> was implicitly convertible to
ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<int>>.
Keep the explicit conversions otherwise it's a pain to convert
ErrorOr<int*> to ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<int>>.
I'm not sure if there should be more SFINAE on those explicit ctors (I
could check if !is_convertible && is_constructible, but since the ctor
has to be called explicitly I don't think there's any need to disable
them when !is_constructible - they'll just fail anyway. It's the
converting ctors that can create interesting ambiguities without proper
SFINAE). I had to SFINAE the explicit ones because otherwise they'd be
ambiguous with the implicit ones in an explicit context, so far as I
could tell.
The converting assignment operators seemed unnecessary (and similarly
buggy/dangerous) - just rely on the converting ctors to convert to the
right type for assignment instead.
llvm-svn: 217048
MachOObjectFile in lib/Object currently has no support for parsing the rebase,
binding, and export information from the LC_DYLD_INFO load command in final
linked mach-o images. This patch adds support for parsing the exports trie data
structure. It also adds an option to llvm-objdump to dump that export info.
I did the exports parsing first because it is the hardest. The information is
encoded in a trie structure, but the standard ObjectFile way to inspect content
is through iterators. So I needed to make an iterator that would do a
non-recursive walk through the trie and maintain the concatenation of edges
needed for the current string prefix.
I plan to add similar support in MachOObjectFile and llvm-objdump to
parse/display the rebasing and binding info too.
llvm-svn: 216808
The attached patch simplifies a few interfaces that don't need to take
ownership of a buffer.
For example, both parseAssembly and parseBitcodeFile will parse the
entire buffer before returning. There is no need to take ownership.
Using a MemoryBufferRef makes it obvious in the type signature that
there is no ownership transfer.
llvm-svn: 216488
Owning the buffer is somewhat inflexible. Some Binaries have sub Binaries
(like Archive) and we had to create dummy buffers just to handle that. It is
also a bad fit for IRObjectFile where the Module wants to own the buffer too.
Keeping this ownership would make supporting IR inside native objects
particularly painful.
This patch focuses in lib/Object. If something elsewhere used to own an Binary,
now it also owns a MemoryBuffer.
This patch introduces a few new types.
* MemoryBufferRef. This is just a pair of StringRefs for the data and name.
This is to MemoryBuffer as StringRef is to std::string.
* OwningBinary. A combination of Binary and a MemoryBuffer. This is needed
for convenience functions that take a filename and return both the
buffer and the Binary using that buffer.
The C api now uses OwningBinary to avoid any change in semantics. I will start
a new thread to see if we want to change it and how.
llvm-svn: 216002
file with -macho, the Mach-O specific object file parser option.
After some discussion I chose to do this implementation contained in the logic
of llvm-objdump’s MachODump.cpp using a second disassembler for thumb when
needed and with updates mostly contained in the MachOObjectFile class.
llvm-svn: 215931
Add header guards to files that were missing guards. Remove #endif comments
as they don't seem common in LLVM (we can easily add them back if we decide
they're useful)
Changes made by clang-tidy with minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 215558
MachOObjectFile::getArch(uint32_t CPUType, uint32_t CPUSubType) .
Upcoming changes will cause existing test cases to use this but
I wanted to check in this obvious change separately.
llvm-svn: 215150
Having both Triple::arm64 and Triple::aarch64 is extremely confusing, and
invites bugs where only one is checked. In reality, the only legitimate
difference between the two (arm64 usually means iOS) is also present in the OS
part of the triple and that's what should be checked.
We still parse the "arm64" triple, just canonicalise it to Triple::aarch64, so
there aren't any LLVM-side test changes.
llvm-svn: 213743
createBinary documented that it destroyed the parameter in error cases,
though by observation it does not. By passing the unique_ptr by value
rather than lvalue reference, callers are now explicit about passing
ownership and the function implements the documented contract. Remove
the explicit documentation, since now the behavior cannot be anything
other than what was documented, so it's redundant.
Also drops a unique_ptr::release in llvm-nm that was always run on a
null unique_ptr anyway.
llvm-svn: 213557
This adds initial support for PPC32 ELF PIC (Position Independent Code; the
-fPIC variety), thus rectifying a long-standing deficiency in the PowerPC
backend.
Patch by Justin Hibbits!
llvm-svn: 213427
The registration scheme used in r211652 violated the read-only contract of
MemoryBuffer. This caused crashes in llvm-rtdyld where macho objects were backed
by read-only mmap'd memory.
llvm-svn: 213086
It is not clear if llvm.global_ctors should or should not be in llvm.metadata,
but in practice it is not and we need to ignore it for LTO.
llvm-svn: 212351
IRObjectFile provides all the logic for producing mangled names and getting
symbols from inline assembly.
LTOModule then adds logic for linking specific tasks, like constructing
llvm.compiler_user or extracting linker options from the bitcode.
The rule of the thumb is that IRObjectFile has the functionality that is
needed by both LTO and llvm-ar.
llvm-svn: 212349