This patch adds the target call back relaxTlsIeToLe to support TLS relaxation
from initial exec to local exec model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48091
llvm-svn: 340281
Older Arm architectures do not support the MOVT and MOVW instructions so we
must use an alternative sequence of instructions to transfer control to the
destination.
Assuming at least Armv5 this patch adds support for Thunks that load or add
to the program counter. Note that there are no Armv5 Thumb Thunks as there
is no Thumb branch instruction in Armv5 that supports Thunks. These thunks
will not work for Armv4t (arm7tdmi) as this architecture cannot change state
from using the LDR or ADD instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50077
llvm-svn: 340160
We have a dead piece of code there which is impossible to trigger
using regular objects I believe.
Patch removes it and adds a test case showing how this condition
can be triggered with use of a broken object and crash the linker.
llvm-svn: 339680
The code involved was simply dead. `IgnoreAll` value is used in
`maybeReportUndefined` only which is never called for -r.
And at the same time `IgnoreAll` was set only for -r.
llvm-svn: 339672
That piece of code is really very old and "protected"
from TLS relocations against symbol in non-allocatable sections.
It is useless because normally non-alloc sections have relocations
with allocatable targets, but not the reverse.
And so the code was simply dead.
llvm-svn: 339553
Patch by PkmX.
This patch makes lld recognize RISC-V target and implements basic
relocation for RV32/RV64 (and RVC). This should be necessary for static
linking ELF applications.
The ABI documentation for RISC-V can be found at:
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md.
Note that the documentation is far from complete so we had to figure out
some details from bfd.
The patch should be pretty straightforward. Some highlights:
- A new relocation Expr R_RISCV_PC_INDIRECT is added. This is needed as
the low part of a PC-relative relocation is linked to the corresponding
high part (auipc), see:
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md#pc-relative-symbol-addresses
- LLVM's MC support for RISC-V is very incomplete (we are working on
this), so tests are given in objectyaml format with the original
assembly included in the comments. Once we have complete support for
RISC-V in MC, we can switch to llvm-as/llvm-objdump.
- We don't support linker relaxation for now as it requires greater
changes to lld that is beyond the scope of this patch. Once this is
accepted we can start to work on adding relaxation to lld.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39322
llvm-svn: 339364
During copy relocation of a variable defined in a DSO, if a TLS variable in that DSO happens to have the same st_value, it would also be copied. This was unnecessary because the addresses of TLS variables are relative to TLS segment. They don't interfere with non-TLS variables.
This copying behavior can be harmful in the following scenario:
For function-scope thread-local variables with non-trivial constructors,
they have guard variables. In the case of x86_64 general-dynamic model:
template <int N>
void foo() {
thread_local std::string a;
}
GOT[n] R_X86_64_DTPMOD64 guard variable for a
GOT[n+1] R_X86_64_DTPOFF64 guard variable for a
GOT[n+2] R_X86_64_DTPMOD64 a
GOT[n+3] R_X86_64_DTPOFF64 a
a and its guard variable are both represented as TLS variables, which
should be within the same module. If one is copy relocated to the main
module while the other is not, their module ID will mismatch and can
cause access without prior construction.
Reviewers: ruiu, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, arichardson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50289
llvm-svn: 339042
Patch by Matthew Koontz!
Before, direct calls to __wrap_sym would not map to valid PLT entries,
so they would crash at runtime. This change maps such calls to the same
PLT entry as calls to sym that are then wrapped.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48502
llvm-svn: 336609
Patch by Rahul Chaudhry!
This change adds experimental support for SHT_RELR sections, proposed
here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/generic-abi/bX460iggiKg
Pass '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr' to enable generation of SHT_RELR section
and DT_RELR, DT_RELRSZ, and DT_RELRENT dynamic tags.
Definitions for the new ELF section type and dynamic array tags, as well
as the encoding used in the new section are all under discussion and are
subject to change. Use with caution!
Pass '--use-android-relr-tags' with '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr' to use
SHT_ANDROID_RELR section type instead of SHT_RELR, as well as
DT_ANDROID_RELR* dynamic tags instead of DT_RELR*. The generated
section contents are identical.
'--pack-dyn-relocs=android+relr --use-android-relr-tags' enables both
'--pack-dyn-relocs=android' and '--pack-dyn-relocs=relr': lld will
encode the relative relocations in a SHT_ANDROID_RELR section, and pack
the rest of the dynamic relocations in a SHT_ANDROID_REL(A) section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48247
llvm-svn: 336594
This patch adds the target call back relaxTlsLdToLe to support TLS relaxation
from local dynamic to local exec model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48293
llvm-svn: 336559
The local dynamic TLS access on PPC64 ELF v2 ABI uses R_PPC64_GOT_DTPREL16*
relocations when a TLS variables falls outside 2 GB of the thread storage
block. This patch adds support for these relocations by adding a new RelExpr
called R_TLSLD_GOT_OFF which emits a got entry for the TLS variable relative
to the dynamic thread pointer using the relocation R_PPC64_DTPREL64. It then
evaluates the R_PPC64_GOT_DTPREL16* relocations as the got offset for the
R_PPC64_DTPREL64 got entries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48484
llvm-svn: 335732
In glibc libc.so.6, the multiple versions of sys_errlist share the same Symbol instance. When sys_errlist is copy relocated, we would replace SharedSymbol with Defined in the first iteration of the following loop:
for (SharedSymbol *Sym : getSymbolsAt<ELFT>(SS))
Then in the second iteration, we think the symbol (which has been changed to Defined) is still SharedSymbol and screw up (the address ends up in the `Size` field).
llvm-svn: 334432
Almost all entries inside MIPS GOT are referenced by signed 16-bit
index. Zero entry lies approximately in the middle of the GOT. So the
total number of GOT entries cannot exceed ~16384 for 32-bit architecture
and ~8192 for 64-bit architecture. This limitation makes impossible to
link rather large application like for example LLVM+Clang. There are two
workaround for this problem. The first one is using the -mxgot
compiler's flag. It enables using a 32-bit index to access GOT entries.
But each access requires two assembly instructions two load GOT entry
index to a register. Another workaround is multi-GOT. This patch
implements it.
Here is a brief description of multi-GOT for detailed one see the
following link https://dmz-portal.mips.com/wiki/MIPS_Multi_GOT.
If the sum of local, global and tls entries is less than 64K only single
got is enough. Otherwise, multi-got is created. Series of primary and
multiple secondary GOTs have the following layout:
```
- Primary GOT
Header
Local entries
Global entries
Relocation only entries
TLS entries
- Secondary GOT
Local entries
Global entries
TLS entries
...
```
All GOT entries required by relocations from a single input file
entirely belong to either primary or one of secondary GOTs. To reference
GOT entries each GOT has its own _gp value points to the "middle" of the
GOT. In the code this value loaded to the register which is used for GOT
access.
MIPS 32 function's prologue:
```
lui v0,0x0
0: R_MIPS_HI16 _gp_disp
addiu v0,v0,0
4: R_MIPS_LO16 _gp_disp
```
MIPS 64 function's prologue:
```
lui at,0x0
14: R_MIPS_GPREL16 main
```
Dynamic linker does not know anything about secondary GOTs and cannot
use a regular MIPS mechanism for GOT entries initialization. So we have
to use an approach accepted by other architectures and create dynamic
relocations R_MIPS_REL32 to initialize global entries (and local in case
of PIC code) in secondary GOTs. But ironically MIPS dynamic linker
requires GOT entries and correspondingly ordered dynamic symbol table
entries to deal with dynamic relocations. To handle this problem
relocation-only section in the primary GOT contains entries for all
symbols referenced in global parts of secondary GOTs. Although the sum
of local and normal global entries of the primary got should be less
than 64K, the size of the primary got (including relocation-only entries
can be greater than 64K, because parts of the primary got that overflow
the 64K limit are used only by the dynamic linker at dynamic link-time
and not by 16-bit gp-relative addressing at run-time.
The patch affects common LLD code in the following places:
- Added new hidden -mips-got-size flag. This flag required to set low
maximum size of a single GOT to be able to test the implementation using
small test cases.
- Added InputFile argument to the getRelocTargetVA function. The same
symbol referenced by GOT relocation from different input file might be
allocated in different GOT. So result of relocation depends on the file.
- Added new ctor to the DynamicReloc class. This constructor records
settings of dynamic relocation which used to adjust address of 64kb page
lies inside a specific output section.
With the patch LLD is able to link all LLVM+Clang+LLD applications and
libraries for MIPS 32/64 targets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31528
llvm-svn: 334390
The original computation for shared object symbol alignment is wrong when
st_value equals 0. It is very unusual for dso symbols to have st_value equal 0.
But when it happens, it causes obscure run time bugs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47602
llvm-svn: 334135
Add support for the R_PPC64_GOT_TLSLD16 relocations used to build the address of
the tls_index struct used in local-dynamic tls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47538
llvm-svn: 333681
getRelocTargetVA for R_TLSGD and R_TLSLD RelExprs calculate an offset from the
end of the got, so adjust the names to reflect this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47379
llvm-svn: 333674
Adds handling of all the relocation types for general-dynamic thread local
storage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47325
llvm-svn: 333420
Both R_PPC_CALL and R_PPC_CALL_PLT Exprs map to the R_PPC64_REL24 relocation
which has the form Sym + addend - P.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46654
llvm-svn: 332127
The current support for V1 ABI in LLD is incomplete.
This patch removes V1 ABI support and changes the default behavior to V2 ABI,
issuing an error when using the V1 ABI. It also updates the testcases to V2
and removes any V1 specific tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46316
llvm-svn: 331529
This is slightly simpler to read IMHO. Now if a symbol has a position
in the file, it is Defined.
The main motivation is that with this a SharedSymbol doesn't need a
section, which reduces the size of SymbolUnion.
With this the peak allocation when linking chromium goes from 568.1 to
564.2 MB.
llvm-svn: 330966
It returns a different Expr only in the case of creating a function
symbol pointing to its plt entry. We can just add a call to
addPltEntry to avoid that and return void.
With this patch further simplifications of how we handle copy
relocations are possible.
llvm-svn: 330960
As was mentioned in comments for D45158,
isPicRel's name does not make much sense,
because what this method does is checks if
we need to create the dynamic relocation or not.
Instead of renaming it to something different,
we can 'isPicRel' completely.
We can reuse the getDynRel method.
They are logically very close, getDynRel can just return
R_*_NONE in case no dynamic relocation should be produced
and that would simplify things and avoid functionality
correlation/duplication with 'isPicRel'.
The patch does this change.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45248
llvm-svn: 329275
Now that we have the ability to create short thunks, it is beneficial
for thunk sections to be surrounded by ThunkSectionSpacing bytes
of code on both sides in order to increase the likelihood that the
distance from the thunk to the target will be sufficiently small to
allow for the creation of a short thunk. This is currently the case
for most thunks that we create, except for the last one, which could,
depending on the size of the output section, potentially appear near
the end and therefore have a relatively small amount of code after it.
This patch moves the last thunk section to ThunkSectionSpacing bytes
before the end of the output section, as long as the section is larger
than 2*ThunkSectionSpacing bytes. It reduces the size of Chromium
for Android's .text section by 32KB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44966
llvm-svn: 328889
This "fixes" PR36678 by just producing an error when we find a case
where we would produce an plt entry that used ebx but ebx would not be
set.
llvm-svn: 327542
This avoids creating multiple thunks for symbols with aliases or which
belong to ICF'd sections. This patch reduces the size of Chromium for
Android by 260KB (0.8% of .text).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44284
llvm-svn: 327154
This should resolve the issue that lld build fails in some hosts
that uses case-insensitive file system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43788
llvm-svn: 326339
The profailing style in lld seem to be to not include such empty lines.
Clang-tidy/clang-format seem to handle this just fine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43528
llvm-svn: 325629
Now that we have R_ADDEND, UseSymVA was redundant. We only want to
write the symbol virtual address when using an expression other than
R_ADDEND.
llvm-svn: 325360
Summary:
This follows up on r321889 where writing of Elf_Rel addends was partially
moved to RelocationBaseSection. This patch ensures that the addends are
always written to the output section when a input section uses RELA but the
output is REL.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42843
llvm-svn: 325328
Summary:
While trying to make a linker script behave the same way with lld as it did
with bfd, I discovered that lld currently doesn't diagnose overlapping
output sections. I was getting very strange runtime failures which I
tracked down to overlapping sections in the resulting binary. When linking
with ld.bfd overlapping output sections are an error unless
--noinhibit-exec is passed and I believe lld should behave the same way
here to avoid surprising crashes at runtime.
The patch also uncovered an errors in the tests: arm-thumb-interwork-thunk
was creating a binary where .got.plt was placed at an address overlapping
with .got.
Reviewers: ruiu, grimar, rafael
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41046
llvm-svn: 323856
Symbol had both Visibility and getVisibility() and they had different
meanings. That is just too easy to get wrong.
getVisibility() would compute the visibility of a particular symbol
(foo in bar.o), and Visibility stores the computed value we will put
in the output.
There is only one case when we want what getVisibility() provides, so
inline it.
llvm-svn: 322590
When we have --icf=safe we should be able to define --icf=all as a
shorthand for --icf=safe --ignore-function-address-equality.
For now --ignore-function-address-equality is used only to control
access to non preemptable symbols in shared libraries.
llvm-svn: 322152
This splits relocation processing in two steps.
First, analyze what needs to be done at the relocation spot. This can
be a constant (non preemptible symbol, relative got reference, etc) or
require a dynamic relocation. At this step we also consider creating
copy relocations.
Once that is done we decide if we need a got or a plt entry.
The code is simpler IMHO. For example:
- There is a single call to isPicRel since the logic is not split
among adjustExpr and the caller.
- R_MIPS_GOTREL is simple to handle now.
- The tracking of what is preemptible or not is much simpler now.
This also fixes a regression with symbols being both in a got and copy
relocated. They had regressed in r268668 and r268149.
The other test changes are because of error messages changes or the
order of two relocations in the output.
llvm-svn: 322047
The body of the in scanRelocs is fairly big. This moves it to its own
function.
It is not a big readability win by itself, but should help further
refactoring.
llvm-svn: 322035