This changes the encoding of the `attribute` field, which currently only
contains the value `0` denoting this tag is for an exception, from
`varuint32` to `uint8`. This field is effectively unused at the moment
and reserved for future use, and it is not likely to need `varuint32`
even in future.
See https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/pull/162.
This does not change any encoded binaries because `0` is encoded in the
same way both in `varuint32` and `uint8`.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104571
Summary: Add support for dumping line number
information for XCOFF object files in llvm-objdump.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101272
Commit 6a2ea84600 ("BPF: Add more relocation kinds")
added new relocations R_BPF_64_ABS64 and R_BPF_64_ABS32
for normal 64-bit and 32-bit data relocations.
This is to replace some of functionalities with
R_BPF_64_64 and R_BPF_64_32 so that new R_BPF_64_64
and R_BPF_64_32 semantics are for ld_imm64 and
call instructions only.
The BPF support in lib/Object/RelocationResolver.cpp
is used to perform normal data relocations for
the case like DWARFObjInMemory with an object file
(search function getRelocationResolver() in file
DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFContext.cpp) or llvm-readobj
to dump ".stack_sizes" section data.
In all these casees, normal 64-bit and 32-bit relocations
are performed and such resolution resolution
is exactly what implemented in RelocationResolver.cpp.
But Commit 6a2ea84600 missed to change
R_BPF_64_64/R_BPF_64_32 to R_BPF_64_ABS64/R_BPF_64_ABS32.
This patch fixed the issue and added a test for it
with llvm-readobj dumping ".stack_sizes" section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103864
getRelocatedSection interface should not check that the object file is
relocatable, as executable files may have relocations preserved with
`--emit-relocs` linker flag. The relocations are useful in context of post-link
binary analysis for function reference identification. For example, BOLT relies
on relocations to perform function reordering.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102296
Add in the ability of parsing symbol table for 64 bit object.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85774
Summary: This is a NFC patch to change the input parameter of the method SectionRef::isDebugSection(), by replacing the StringRef SectionName with DataRefImpl Sec. This allows us to determine if a section is debug type in more ways than just by section name.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102601
This makes it possible for targets to define their own MCObjectFileInfo.
This MCObjectFileInfo is then used to determine things like section alignment.
This is a follow up to D101462 and prepares for the RISCV backend defining the
text section alignment depending on the enabled extensions.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101921
__table_base is know 64-bit, since in LLVM it represents a function pointer offset
__table_base32 is a copy in wasm32 for use in elem init expr, since no truncation may be used there.
New reloc R_WASM_TABLE_INDEX_REL_SLEB64 added
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101784
This fixes a bug with string merging with string symbols that contain
NULLs, as is the case in the `merge-string.s` test.
The bug only showed when we run with `--relocatable` and then try read
the resulting object back in. In this case we would end up with string
symbols that extend past the end of the segment in which they live.
The problem comes from the fact that sections which are flagged as
string mergable assume that all strings are NULL terminated. The
merging algorithm will drop trailing chars that follow a NULL since they
are essentially unreachable. However, the "size" attribute (in the
symbol table) of such a truncated symbol is not updated resulting a
symbol size that can overlap the end of the segment.
I verified that this can happen in ELF too given the right conditions
and the its harmless enough. In practice Strings that contain embedded
null should not be part of a mergable section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102281
This change was originally landed in: 5000a1b4b9
It was reverted in: 061e071d8c
This change adds support for a new WASM_SEG_FLAG_STRINGS flag in
the object format which works in a similar fashion to SHF_STRINGS
in the ELF world.
Unlike the ELF linker this support is currently limited:
- No support for SHF_MERGE (non-string merging)
- Always do full tail merging ("lo" can be merged with "hello")
- Only support single byte strings (p2align 0)
Like the ELF linker merging is only performed at `-O1` and above.
This fixes part of https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48828,
although crucially it doesn't not currently support debug sections
because they are not represented by data segments (they are custom
sections)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97657
This change adds support for a new WASM_SEG_FLAG_STRINGS flag in
the object format which works in a similar fashion to SHF_STRINGS
in the ELF world.
Unlike the ELF linker this support is currently limited:
- No support for SHF_MERGE (non-string merging)
- Always do full tail merging ("lo" can be merged with "hello")
- Only support single byte strings (p2align 0)
Like the ELF linker merging is only performed at `-O1` and above.
This fixes part of https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48828,
although crucially it doesn't not currently support debug sections
because they are not represented by data segments (they are custom
sections)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97657
This untangles the MCContext and the MCObjectFileInfo. There is a circular
dependency between MCContext and MCObjectFileInfo. Currently this dependency
also exists during construction: You can't contruct a MOFI without a MCContext
without constructing the MCContext with a dummy version of that MOFI first.
This removes this dependency during construction. In a perfect world,
MCObjectFileInfo wouldn't depend on MCContext at all, but only be stored in the
MCContext, like other MC information. This is future work.
This also shifts/adds more information to the MCContext making it more
available to the different targets. Namely:
- TargetTriple
- ObjectFileType
- SubtargetInfo
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101462
When running in relocatable mode any input data segments that are part
of a comdat group should not be merged with other segments of the same
name. This is because the final linker needs to keep the separate so
they can be included/excluded individually.
Often this is not a problem since normally only one section with a given
name `foo` ends up in the output object file. However, the problem
occurs when one input contains `foo` which part of a comdat and another
object contains a local symbol `foo` we were attempting to merge them.
This behaviour matches (I believe) that of the ELF linker. See
`LinkerScript.cpp:addInputSec`.
Fixes: https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/issues/9726
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101703
TextAPI/ELF has moved out into InterfaceStubs, so theres no longer a
need to seperate out TextAPI between formats.
Reviewed By: ributzka, int3, #lld-macho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99811
The number of events and the type index should be encoded in ULEB128,
but they were incorrctly encoded in LEB128. The smallest number with
which its LEB128 and ULEB128 encodings are different is 64.
There's no way we can generate 64 events in the C++ toolchain
implementation so we can't test that, but the attached test tests when
the type index is 64.
Reviewed By: dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99627
In future patches I will be setting the IsText parameter frequently so I will refactor the args to be in the following order. I have removed the FileSize parameter because it is never used.
```
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MemoryBuffer>>
getFile(const Twine &Filename, bool IsText = false,
bool RequiresNullTerminator = true, bool IsVolatile = false);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MemoryBuffer>>
getFileOrSTDIN(const Twine &Filename, bool IsText = false,
bool RequiresNullTerminator = true);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<MB>>
getFileAux(const Twine &Filename, uint64_t MapSize, uint64_t Offset,
bool IsText, bool RequiresNullTerminator, bool IsVolatile);
static ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<WritableMemoryBuffer>>
getFile(const Twine &Filename, bool IsVolatile = false);
```
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99182
This patch renames the "Initial" member of WasmLimits to the name used
in the spec, "Minimum".
In the core WebAssembly specification, the Limits data type has one
required "min" member and one optional "max" member, indicating the
minimum required size of the corresponding table or memory, and the
maximum size, if any.
Although the WebAssembly spec does instantiate locally-defined tables
and memories with the initial size being equal to the minimum size, it
can't impose such a requirement for imports. It doesn't make sense to
require an initial size for a memory import, for example. The compiler
can only sensibly express the minimum and maximum sizes.
See
https://github.com/WebAssembly/js-types/blob/master/proposals/js-types/Overview.md#naming-of-size-limits
for a related discussion that agrees that the right name of "initial" is
"minimum" when querying the type of a table or memory from JavaScript.
(Of course it still makes sense for JS to speak in terms of an initial
size when it explicitly instantiates memories and tables.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99186
Fix a bug in MachOObjectFile::getSymbolType() that it is not checking if
the iterator is end() before deference the iterator. Instead, return
`Other` type, which aligns with the behavior of `llvm-nm`.
rdar://75291638
Reviewed By: davide, ab
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98739
During D88827 it was requested to remove the local implementation
of Memory/File Buffers:
// TODO: refactor the buffer classes in LLVM to enable us to use them here
// directly.
This patch uses raw_ostream instead of Buffers. Generally, using streams
could allow us to reduce memory usages. No need to load all data into the
memory - the data could be streamed through a smaller buffer.
Thus, this patch uses raw_ostream as an interface for output data:
Error executeObjcopyOnBinary(CopyConfig &Config,
object::Binary &In,
raw_ostream &Out);
Note 1. This patch does not change the implementation of Writers
so that data would be directly stored into raw_ostream.
This is assumed to be done later.
Note 2. It would be better if Writers would be implemented in a such way
that data could be streamed without seeking/updating. If that would be
inconvenient then raw_ostream could be replaced with raw_pwrite_stream
to have a possibility to seek back and update file headers.
This is assumed to be done later if necessary.
Note 3. Current FileOutputBuffer allows using a memory-mapped file.
The raw_fd_ostream (which could be used if data should be stored in the file)
does not allow us to use a memory-mapped file. Memory map functionality
could be implemented for raw_fd_ostream:
It is possible to add resize() method into raw_ostream.
class raw_ostream {
void resize(uint64_t size);
}
That method, implemented for raw_fd_ostream, could create a memory-mapped file.
The streamed data would be written into that memory file then.
Thus we would be able to use memory-mapped files with raw_fd_ostream.
This is assumed to be done later if necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91028
- Add the M68k-specific MC layer implementation
- Add ELF support for M68k
- Add M68k-specifc CC and reloc
TODO: Currently AsmParser and disassembler are not implemented yet.
Please use this bug to track the status:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48976
Authors: myhsu, m4yers, glaubitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88390
This `R_WASM_MEMORY_ADDR_SELFREL_I32` relocation represents an offset
between its relocating address and the symbol address. It's very similar
to `R_X86_64_PC32` but restricted to be used for only data segments.
```
S + A - P
```
A: Represents the addend used to compute the value of the relocatable
field.
P: Represents the place of the storage unit being relocated.
S: Represents the value of the symbol whose index resides in the
relocation entry.
Proposal: https://github.com/WebAssembly/tool-conventions/issues/162
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96659
As a resolution to https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25295 , GNU as
from binutils 2.35 supports the optional third argument for the .symver directive.
'remove' for a non-default version is useful:
`.symver def_v1, def@v1, remove` => def_v1 is not retained in the symbol table.
Previously the user has to strip the original symbol or specify a `local:`
version node in a version script to localize the symbol.
`.symver def, def@@v1, remove` and `.symver def, def@@@v1, remove` are supported
as well, though they are identical to `.symver def, def@@@v1`.
local/hidden are not useful so this patch does not implement them.
With reference types, tables can have non-zero table numbers. This
commit adds support for element sections against these tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97923
IR symbol table does not parse inline asm. A symbol only referenced by inline
asm is not in the IR symbol table, so LTO does not know that the definition (in
another translation unit) is referenced and may internalize it, even if that
definition has `__attribute__((used))` (which lowers to `llvm.compiler.used` on
ELF targets since D97446).
```
// cabac.c
__attribute__((used)) const uint8_t ff_h264_cabac_tables[...] = {...};
// h264_cabac.c
asm("lea ff_h264_cabac_tables(%rip), %0" : ...);
```
`__attribute__((used))` is the recommended way to tell the compiler there may
be inline asm references, so the usage is perfectly fine. This patch
conservatively sets the `FB_used` bit on `llvm.compiler.used` symbols to work
around the IR symbol table limitation. Note: before D97446, Clang never emitted
symbols in the `llvm.compiler.used` list, so this change does not punish any
Clang emitted global object.
Without the patch, `ff_h264_cabac_tables` may be assigned to a non-external
partition and get internalized. Then we will get a linker error because the
`cabac.c` definition is not exposed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97755
And delete the SmallPtrSetImpl overload.
While here, decrease inline element counts from 8 to 4. See D97128 for the choice.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97257
A simple refactoring patch which let us use `DataExtractor::getSLEB128` rather than using a lambda function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95158
FaultsMapParser lived in CodeGen and was forcing llvm-objdump to
link CodeGen and everything CodeGen depends on.
This was previously attempted in r240364 to fix a link failure.
The CodeGen dependency was independently added to fix the same
link failure, and that ended up being kept.
Removing the dependency seems like the correct layering for
llvm-objdump.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95414
Element sections will also need flags, so we shouldn't squat the
WASM_SEGMENT namespace.
Depends on D90948.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92315
This commit adds table symbol support in a partial way, while still
including some special cases for the __indirect_function_table symbol.
No change in tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94075
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45698.
Specification says that
"Loadable segment entries in the program header table appear
in ascending order, sorted on the p_vaddr member."
Our `toMappedAddr()` relies on this condition. This patch
adds a warning when the sorting order of loadable segments is wrong.
In this case we force segments sorting and that allows
`toMappedAddr()` to work as expected.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92641
SUMMARY:
1. added a new option -xcoff-traceback-table to control whether generate traceback table for function.
2. implement the functionality of emit traceback table of a function.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92398
Allow sections to be placed into COMDAT groups, in addtion to functions and data
segments.
Also make section symbols unnamed, which allows sections with identical names
(section names are independent of their section symbols, but previously we
gave the symbols the same name as their sections, which results in collisions
when sections are identically-named).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92691
This also teaches MachO writers/readers about the MachO cpu subtype,
beyond the minimal subtype reader support present at the moment.
This also defines a preprocessor macro to allow users to distinguish
__arm64__ from __arm64e__.
arm64e defaults to an "apple-a12" CPU, which supports v8.3a, allowing
pointer-authentication codegen.
It also currently defaults to ios14 and macos11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87095
SUMMARY:
Change geNumberOfVRSaved function name to getNumberOfVRSaved of class TBVectorExt
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92225
The indirect function table, synthesized by the linker, is needed if and
only if there are TABLE_INDEX relocs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91637
This commit factors out a WasmTableType definition from WasmTable, as is
the case for WasmGlobal and other data types. Also add support for
extracting the SymbolName for a table from the linking section's symbol
table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91849
change function name from getNumofGPRsSaved to getNumOfGPRsSaved for class XCOFFTracebackTable
Reviewers: Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91882
This allows to reuse the RelocationResolver from the code
that doesn't want to deal with `RelocationRef` class.
I am going to use it in llvm-readobj. See the description
of D91530 for more details.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91533
SUMMARY:
1. decode the Vector extension if has_vec is set
2. decode long table fields, if longtbtable is set.
There is conflict on the bit order of HasVectorInfoMask and HasExtensionTableMask between AIX os header and IBM aix compiler XLC.
In the /usr/include/sys/debug.h defines
static constexpr uint32_t HasVectorInfoMask = 0x0040'0000;
static constexpr uint32_t HasExtensionTableMask = 0x0080'0000;
but the XLC defines as
static constexpr uint32_t HasVectorInfoMask = 0x0080'0000;
static constexpr uint32_t HasExtensionTableMask = 0x0040'0000;
we follows the definition of the IBM AIX compiler XLC here.
Reviewer: Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86461
These relocations represent offsets from the __tls_base symbol.
Previously we were just using normal MEMORY_ADDR relocations and relying
on the linker to select a segment-offset rather and absolute value in
Symbol::getVirtualAddress(). Using an explicit relocation type allows
allow us to clearly distinguish absolute from relative relocations based
on the relocation information alone.
One place this is useful is being able to reject absolute relocation in
the PIC case, but still accept TLS relocations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91276
No longer rely on an external tool to build the llvm component layout.
Instead, leverage the existing `add_llvm_componentlibrary` cmake function and
introduce `add_llvm_component_group` to accurately describe component behavior.
These function store extra properties in the created targets. These properties
are processed once all components are defined to resolve library dependencies
and produce the header expected by llvm-config.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90848
xnu coredumps include an LC_IDENT load command. It's helpful to be able
to just ignore these. IIUC an interested client can grab the identifier
using the MachOObjectFile::load_commands() API.
The status quo is that llvm bails out when it finds an LC_IDENT because
the command is obsolete (see isLoadCommandObsolete).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91221
This is recommit for D90903 with fixes for BB:
1) Used std::move<> when returning Expected<> (http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/112/builds/913)
2) Fixed the name of temporarily file in the file-headers.test (http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/36/builds/1269)
(a local old temporarily file was used before)
For creating `ELFObjectFile` instances we have the factory method
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create(MemoryBufferRef Object)`.
The problem of this method is that it scans the section header to locate some sections.
When a file is truncated or has broken fields in the ELF header, this approach does
not allow us to create the `ELFObjectFile` and dump the ELF header.
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40804
This patch suggests a solution - it allows to delay scaning sections in the
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create`. It now allows user code to call an object
initialization (`initContent()`) later. With that it is possible,
for example, for dumpers just to dump the file header and exit.
By default initialization is still performed as before, what helps to keep
the logic of existent callers untouched.
I've experimented with different approaches when worked on this patch.
I think this approach is better than doing initialization of sections (i.e. scan of them)
on demand, because normally users of `ELFObjectFile` API expect to work with a valid object.
In most cases when a section header table can't be read (because of an error), we don't
have to continue to work with object. So we probably don't need to implement a more complex API.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90903
For creating `ELFObjectFile` instances we have the factory method
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create(MemoryBufferRef Object)`.
The problem of this method is that it scans the section header to locate some sections.
When a file is truncated or has broken fields in the ELF header, this approach does
not allow us to create the `ELFObjectFile` and dump the ELF header.
This is https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40804
This patch suggests a solution - it allows to delay scaning sections in the
`ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::create`. It now allows user code to call an object
initialization (`initContent()`) later. With that it is possible,
for example, for dumpers just to dump the file header and exit.
By default initialization is still performed as before, what helps to keep
the logic of existent callers untouched.
I've experimented with different approaches when worked on this patch.
I think this approach is better than doing initialization of sections (i.e. scan of them)
on demand, because normally users of `ELFObjectFile` API expect to work with a valid object.
In most cases when a section header table can't be read (because of an error), we don't
have to continue to work with object. So we probably don't need to implement a more complex API.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90903
This differentiates the Ryzen 4000/4300/4500/4700 series APUs that were
previously included in gfx909.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90419
Change-Id: Ia901a7157eb2f73ccd9f25dbacec38427312377d
A SMLoc allows MCStreamer to report location-aware diagnostics, which
were previously done by adding SMLoc to various methods (e.g. emit*) in an ad-hoc way.
Since the file:line is most important, the column is less important and
the start token location suffices in many cases, this patch reverts
b7e7131af2
```
// old
symbol-binding-changed.s:6:8: error: local changed binding to STB_GLOBAL
.globl local
^
// new
symbol-binding-changed.s:6:1: error: local changed binding to STB_GLOBAL
.globl local
^
```
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90511
Recognize the __apple_ sections as debug info sections and make sure
they're included in the --show-sections-sizes output.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90433
The code to detect the requirement for 64-bit offsets in the archive
symbol table was not correctly accounting for the archive file signature
and the size of all the contents of the symbol table itself, e.g. the
symbol table's header and string table. Also was not considering the
variation in symbol table formats. This could result in the creation of
large archives with a corrupt symbol table.
Change the testing environment variable SYM64_THRESHOLD to be an
absolute value rather than a power of 2 in order to enable precise
testing of this detection code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89891
Implementation of instructions table.get, table.set, table.grow,
table.size, table.fill, table.copy.
Missing instructions are table.init and elem.drop as they deal with
element sections which are not yet implemented.
Added more tests to tables.s
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89797
Format specifiers of incorrect length are replaced with format specifier
macros from `<cinttypes>` matching the typedefs used to declare the type
of the value being printed.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89637
Adds more testing in basic-assembly.s and a new test tables.s.
Adds support to yaml reading and writing of tables as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88815
At AMD, in an internal audit of our code, we found some corner cases
where we were not quite differentiating targets enough for some old
hardware. This commit is part of fixing that by adding three new
targets:
* The "Oland" and "Hainan" variants of gfx601 are now split out into
gfx602. LLPC (in the GPUOpen driver) and other front-ends could use
that to avoid using the shaderZExport workaround on gfx602.
* One variant of gfx703 is now split out into gfx705. LLPC and other
front-ends could use that to avoid using the
shaderSpiCsRegAllocFragmentation workaround on gfx705.
* The "TongaPro" variant of gfx802 is now split out into gfx805.
TongaPro has a faster 64-bit shift than its former friends in gfx802,
and a subtarget feature could be set up for that to take advantage of
it. This commit does not make that change; it just adds the target.
V2: Add clang changes. Put TargetParser list in order.
V3: AMDGCNGPUs table in TargetParser.cpp needs to be in GPUKind order,
so fix the GPUKind order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88916
Change-Id: Ia901a7157eb2f73ccd9f25dbacec38427312377d
This patch lets the bb_addr_map (renamed to __llvm_bb_addr_map) section use a special section type (SHT_LLVM_BB_ADDR_MAP) instead of SHT_PROGBITS. This would help parsers, dumpers and other tools to use the sh_type ELF field to identify this section rather than relying on string comparison on the section name.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88199
This diff adds support for universal binaries to llvm-objcopy.
This is a recommit of 32c8435ef7 with the asan issue fixed.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88400
This diff refactors writeUniversalBinary and adds writeUniversalBinaryToBuffer.
This is a preparation for adding support for universal binaries to llvm-objcopy.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88372
When adding an archive member with a problem, e.g. a new bitcode with an
old archiver, containing an unsupported attribute, or an ELF file with a
malformed symbol table, the archiver would throw away the error and
simply add the member to the archive without any symbol entries. This
meant that the resultant archive could be silently unusable when not
using --whole-archive, and result in unexpected undefined symbols.
This change fixes this issue by addressing two FIXMEs and only throwing
away not-an-object errors. However, this meant that some LLD tests which
didn't need symbol tables and were using invalid members deliberately to
test the linker's malformed input handling no longer worked, so this
patch also stops the archiver from looking for symbols in an object if
it doesn't require a symbol table, and updates the tests accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88288
Reviewed by: grimar, rupprecht, MaskRay
This patch performs a minor cleanup of the class Slice:
static methods and constructors which take a pointer but assume that
it's not null now take the argument by reference.
NFC.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88320
`ELFFile<ELFT>` has many methods that take pointers,
though they assume that arguments are never null and
hence could take references instead.
This patch performs such clean-up.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87385
This is the split part of D86269, which add a new ELF machine flag called EM_CSKY and related relocations.
Some target-specific flags and tests for csky can be added in follow-up patches later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86610
A Mach-O universal binary may contain bitcode as a slice.
This diff adds proper handling of such binaries to llvm-lipo.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85740
AMDGPU ISA isn't backwards compatible and hence -mcpu must always be specified during disassembly.
However, the AMDGPU target CPU is stored in e_flags in the ELF object.
This patch allows targets to implement CPU string detection, and also implements it for AMDGPU by looking at e_flags.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84519
SUMMARY:
1. This patch provided API for decoding the traceback table info and unit test for the these API.
2. Another patchs will do the following things:
2.1 added a new option --traceback-table to decode the trace back table information for xcoff object file when
using llvm-objdump to disassemble the xcoff objfile.
2.2 print out the traceback table information for llvm-objdump.
Reviewers: Jason liu, Hubert Tong, James Henderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81585
Refactoring function `writeArchive` in ArchiveWriter. Added a new
function `writeArchiveBuffer` that returns the archive in a memory
buffer instead of writing it out to the disk. This refactor is necessary
so as to allow `llvm-libtool-darwin` to write universal files containing
archives.
Reviewed by jhenderson, MaskRay, smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84858