Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Atanasyan 2f1d6366e7 [Mips] Emit ELF header for MIPS target. ELF flags set is mostly hardcoded.
Later we need to improve that solution and build a correct set of flags
by merging ELF flags from all input objects.

llvm-svn: 199555
2014-01-18 16:59:11 +00:00
Simon Atanasyan 362bdc125e [Mips] Implement .plt and .got.plt section creation.
llvm-svn: 199516
2014-01-17 21:18:37 +00:00
Simon Atanasyan 6cac582de5 [Mips] Do not store a pointer to the AtomLayout related to the
_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ symbol. We do not use this ponter anywhere after
assigning of virtual address.

llvm-svn: 199237
2014-01-14 18:19:35 +00:00
Simon Atanasyan 0b4dd91582 [Mips] Factor out constant represents gp value offset to the
MipsTargetLayout class method.

llvm-svn: 199236
2014-01-14 18:19:26 +00:00
Nick Kledzik e555277780 [lld] Introduce registry and Reference kind tuple
The main changes are in:
  include/lld/Core/Reference.h
  include/lld/ReaderWriter/Reader.h
Everything else is details to support the main change.

1) Registration based Readers
Previously, lld had a tangled interdependency with all the Readers.  It would
have been impossible to make a streamlined linker (say for a JIT) which
just supported one file format and one architecture (no yaml, no archives, etc).
The old model also required a LinkingContext to read an object file, which
would have made .o inspection tools awkward.

The new model is that there is a global Registry object. You programmatically 
register the Readers you want with the registry object. Whenever you need to 
read/parse a file, you ask the registry to do it, and the registry tries each 
registered reader.

For ease of use with the existing lld code base, there is one Registry
object inside the LinkingContext object. 


2) Changing kind value to be a tuple
Beside Readers, the registry also keeps track of the mapping for Reference
Kind values to and from strings.  Along with that, this patch also fixes
an ambiguity with the previous Reference::Kind values.  The problem was that
we wanted to reuse existing relocation type values as Reference::Kind values.
But then how can the YAML write know how to convert a value to a string? The
fix is to change the 32-bit Reference::Kind into a tuple with an 8-bit namespace
(e.g. ELF, COFFF, etc), an 8-bit architecture (e.g. x86_64, PowerPC, etc), and
a 16-bit value.  This tuple system allows conversion to and from strings with 
no ambiguities.

llvm-svn: 197727
2013-12-19 21:58:00 +00:00
Simon Atanasyan 9931f95bac Linking of shared libraries for MIPS little-endian 32-bit target.
The following are the most significant peculiarities of MIPS target:
- MIPS ABI requires some special tags in the dynamic table.
- GOT consists of two parts local and global. The local part contains
  entries refer locally visible symbols. The global part contains entries
  refer global symbols.
- Entries in the .dynsym section which have corresponded entries in the
  GOT should be:
  * Emitted at the end of .dynsym section
  * Sorted accordingly to theirs GOT counterparts
- There are "paired" relocations. One or more R_MIPS_HI16 and R_MIPS_GOT16
  relocations should be followed by R_MIPS_LO16 relocation. To calculate
  result of R_MIPS_HI16 and R_MIPS_GOT16 relocations we need to combine
  addends from these relocations and paired R_MIPS_LO16 relocation.

The patch reviewed by Michael Spencer, Shankar Easwaran, Rui Ueyama.
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2156

llvm-svn: 197342
2013-12-15 12:57:28 +00:00