Summary:
Also changes the wasm YAML format to reflect the possibility of having
multiple return types and to put the returns after the params for
consistency with the binary encoding.
Reviewers: aheejin, sbc100
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, arphaman, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69156
llvm-svn: 375283
Summary:
This patch adds the definitions of the constants and structures
necessary to interpret the MemoryInfoList minidump stream, as well as
the object::MinidumpFile interface to access the stream.
While the code is fairly simple, there is one important deviation from
the other minidump streams, which is worth calling out explicitly.
Unlike other "List" streams, the size of the records inside
MemoryInfoList stream is not known statically. Instead it is described
in the stream header. This makes it impossible to return
ArrayRef<MemoryInfo> from the accessor method, as it is done with other
streams. Instead, I create an iterator class, which can be parameterized
by the runtime size of the structure, and return
iterator_range<iterator> instead.
Reviewers: amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: JosephTremoulet, zturner, markmentovai, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68210
llvm-svn: 374051
The static analyzer is warning about a potential null dereference, but we should be able to use cast<COFFObjectFile> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
llvm-svn: 373324
ELF files generated for X86_64 targets may contain 64-bit PC-relative
relocations. For instance, an exception handler table entry contains the start
of exception-throwing frame relative to the start of exception handler. As these
two labels belong to different sections, their difference and so the relocation
is 64-bit.
An attempt to parse such file, i.e. in DWARFContext::create, results in "failed
to compute relocation" error.
This fix adds support for such relocations to RelocationResolver.cpp.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67779
Patch by Oleg Pliss (Oleg.Pliss@azul.com)
llvm-svn: 372447
Summary:
This is a patch for updating TextAPI/Macho to read in targets as opposed to arch/platform.
This is because in previous versions tbd files only supported a single platform but that is no longer the case,
so, now its tracked by unique triples.
This precedes a seperate patch that will add the TBD-v4 format
Reviewers: ributzka, steven_wu, plotfi, compnerd, smeenai
Reviewed By: ributzka
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67527
llvm-svn: 372396
Make the method MachOUniversalBinary::getObjectForArch return MachOUniversalBinary::ObjectForArch
and add helper methods MachOUniversalBinary::getMachOObjectForArch, MachOUniversalBinary::getArchiveForArch
for those who explicitly expect to get a MachOObjectFile or an Archive.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67700
Test plan: make check-all
llvm-svn: 372278
r361845 changed the way we handle "D16" vs. "D32" targets; there used to
be a negative "d16" which removed instructions from the instruction set,
and now there's a "d32" feature which adds instructions to the
instruction set. This is good, but there was an oversight in the
implementation: the behavior of VFPv2 was changed. In particular, the
"vfp2" feature was changed to imply "d32". This is wrong: VFPv2 only
supports 16 D registers.
In practice, this means if you specify -mfpu=vfpv2, the compiler will
generate illegal instructions.
This patch gets rid of "vfp2d16" and "vfp2d16sp", and fixes "vfp2" and
"vfp2sp" so they don't imply "d32".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67375
llvm-svn: 372186
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet, JDevlieghere, alexshap, rupprecht, jhenderson
Subscribers: sdardis, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, jakehehrlich, jrtc27, MaskRay, atanasyan, jsji, seiya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67499
llvm-svn: 371742
Summary:
This commit is the final one for adding tapi support to the llvm-nm implementation.
This commit also has accompanying tests the additions to lib/Object
Reviewers: ributzka, steven_wu
Reviewed By: ributzka
Subscribers: hiraditya, plotfi, dexonsmith, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66160
llvm-svn: 371576
Adding testscases for this via llvm-dwarfdump.
Also add testcases for the existing resolver support for X86.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67340
llvm-svn: 371515
See http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-February/130583.html
and D60242 for the lld partition feature.
This patch:
* Teaches yaml2obj to parse the 3 section types.
* Teaches llvm-readobj/llvm-readelf to dump the 3 section types.
There is no test for SHT_LLVM_DEPENDENT_LIBRARIES in llvm-readobj. Add
it as well.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67228
llvm-svn: 371157
In mingw environments, resources are normally compiled to resource
object files directly, instead of letting the linker convert them to
COFF format.
Since some time, GCC supports the notion of a default manifest object.
When invoking the linker, GCC looks for the default manifest object
file, and if found in the expected path, it is added to linker commands.
The default manifest is one that indicates support for the latest known
versions of windows, to implicitly unlock the modern behaviours of certain
APIs.
Not all mingw/gcc distributions include this file, but e.g. in msys2,
the default manifest object is distributed in a separate package (which
can be but might not always be installed).
This means that even if user projects only use one single resource
object file, the linker can end up with two resource object files,
and thus needs to support merging them.
The default manifest has a language id of zero, and GNU ld has got
logic for dropping a manifest with a zero language id, if there's
another manifest present with a nonzero language id. If there are
multiple manifests with a nonzero language id, the merging process
errors out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66825
llvm-svn: 370974
Fix: add a 'consumeError()' call to ObjectFile.cpp.
This error was never checked.
Original commit message:
It adds a test case for a problem fixed by D66976 <https://reviews.llvm.org/D66976>.
It was introduced by me in D66089 <https://reviews.llvm.org/D66089>.
The error reported was never consumed because of a wrong variable name used,
so it could fail when LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS is used.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67002
llvm-svn: 370669
Extend WindowsResourceParser to support using a ResourceSectionRef for
loading resources from an object file.
Only allow merging resource object files in mingw mode; keep the
existing error on multiple resource objects in link mode.
If there only is one resource object file and no .res resources,
don't parse and recreate the .rsrc section, but just link it in without
inspecting it. This allows users to produce any .rsrc section (outside
of what the parser supports), just like before. (I don't have a specific
need for this, but it reduces the risk of this new feature.)
Separate out the .rsrc section chunks in InputFiles.cpp, and only include
them in the list of section chunks to link if we've determined that there
only was one single resource object. (We need to keep other chunks from
those object files, as they can legitimately contain other sections as
well, in addition to .rsrc section chunks.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66824
llvm-svn: 370436
Instead of updating a global variable counter for the next index of
strings and data blobs, pass along a reference to actual data/string
vectors and let the TreeNode insertion methods add their data/strings to
the vectors when a new entry is needed.
Additionally, if the resource tree had duplicates, that were ignored
with -force:multipleres in lld, we no longer store all versions of the
duplicated resource data, now we only keep the one that actually ends
up referenced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66823
llvm-svn: 370435
This allows llvm-readobj to print the contents of each resource
when printing resources from an object file or executable, like it
already does for plain .res files.
This requires providing the whole COFFObjectFile to ResourceSectionRef.
This supports both object files and executables. For executables,
the DataRVA field is used as is to look up the right section.
For object files, ideally we would need to complete linking of them
and fix up all relocations to know what the DataRVA field would end up
being. In practice, the only thing that makes sense for an RVA field
is an ADDR32NB relocation. Thus, find a relocation pointing at this
field, verify that it has the expected type, locate the symbol it
points at, look up the section the symbol points at, and read from the
right offset in that section.
This works both for GNU windres object files (which use one single
.rsrc section, with all relocations against the base of the .rsrc
section, with the original value of the DataRVA field being the
offset of the data from the beginning of the .rsrc section) and
cvtres object files (with two separate .rsrc$01 and .rsrc$02 sections,
and one symbol per data entry, with the original pre-relocated DataRVA
field being set to zero).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66820
llvm-svn: 370433
Instead of blindly incrementing pointers in llvm-readobj, use this
helper, which does bounds checking against the available section
data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66818
llvm-svn: 370310
Previously, the expression (Reader.readFoo()) was expanded twice,
triggering asserts as one of the Error types ends up not checked
(and as it was expanded twice, the method would end up called twice
if it failed first).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66817
llvm-svn: 370309
Summary:
This patch implements main entry and auxiliary entries of symbol table generation for llvm-readobj on AIX.
The source code of aix_xcoff_xlc_test8.o (compile with xlc) is:
-bash-4.2$ cat test8.c
extern int i;
extern int TestforXcoff;
extern int fun(int i);
static int static_i;
char* p="abcd";
int fun1(int j) {
static_i++;
j++;
j=j+*p;
return j;
}
int main() {
i++;
fun(i);
return fun1(i);
}
Patch provided by DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65240
llvm-svn: 370097
Summary:
The intention for this is to allow reading and printing symbols out from
llvm-nm. Tapi file, and Tapi universal follow a similiar format to
their respective MachO Object format.
The tests are dependent on llvm-nm processing tbd files which is why its in D66160
Reviewers: ributzka, steven_wu, lhames
Reviewed By: ributzka, lhames
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66159
llvm-svn: 369600
Summary:
Tapi files are YAML files that start with the !tapi tag. The only execption are
TBD v1 files, which don't have a tag. In that case we have to scan a little
further and check if the first key "archs" exists.
This is the first patch in a series of patches to add libObject support for
text-based dynamic library (.tbd) files.
This patch is practically exactly the same as D37820, that was never pushed to master,
and is needed for future commits related to reading tbd files for llvm-nm
Reviewers: ributzka, steven_wu, bollu, espindola, jfb, shafik, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: steven_wu
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #sanitizers, #lldb, #libc, #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66149
llvm-svn: 369579
It's okay to *not* copy the trailing zero of a windows section/symbol name.
This is compatible with strncpy behavior but gcc doesn't know that and
throws an invalid warning. Encode this behavior in a proper function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66420
llvm-svn: 369501
There are 4 methods that return std::error_code now,
though they do not have to because they are always succeed.
I refactored them.
This allows to simplify the code in tools a bit.
llvm-svn: 369263
Commit https://reviews.llvm.org/D57939 ("[DWARF] Refactor
RelocVisitor and fix computation of SHT_RELA-typed relocation entries)
made a change for relocation resolution when operating
on an object file.
The change unfortunately broke BPF as given SymbolValue (S) and
Addent (A), previously relocation is resolved to
S + A
and after the change, it is resolved to
S
This patch fixed the issue by resolving relocation correctly.
It looks not all relocation resolution reaches here and I did not
trace down exactly when. But I do find if the object file includes
codes in two different ELF sections than default ".text",
the above bug will be triggered.
This patch included a trivial two function source code to
demonstrate this issue. The relocation for .debug_loc is resolved
incorrectly due to this and llvm-objdump cannot display source
annotated assembly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66372
llvm-svn: 369199
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
llvm-svn: 369013
Changes: no changes. A fix for the clang code will be landed right on top.
Original commit message:
SectionRef::getName() returns std::error_code now.
Returning Expected<> instead has multiple benefits.
For example, it forces user to check the error returned.
Also Expected<> may keep a valuable string error message,
what is more useful than having a error code.
(Object\invalid.test was updated to show the new messages printed.)
This patch makes a change for all users to switch to Expected<> version.
Note: in a few places the error returned was ignored before my changes.
In such places I left them ignored. My intention was to convert the interface
used, and not to improve and/or the existent users in this patch.
(Though I think this is good idea for a follow-ups to revisit such places
and either remove consumeError calls or comment each of them to clarify why
it is OK to have them).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66089
llvm-svn: 368826
SectionRef::getName() returns std::error_code now.
Returning Expected<> instead has multiple benefits.
For example, it forces user to check the error returned.
Also Expected<> may keep a valuable string error message,
what is more useful than having a error code.
(Object\invalid.test was updated to show the new messages printed.)
This patch makes a change for all users to switch to Expected<> version.
Note: in a few places the error returned was ignored before my changes.
In such places I left them ignored. My intention was to convert the interface
used, and not to improve and/or the existent users in this patch.
(Though I think this is good idea for a follow-ups to revisit such places
and either remove consumeError calls or comment each of them to clarify why
it is OK to have them).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66089
llvm-svn: 368812
Convert SymbolNameSize and SectionNameSize into just `NameSize`. The length of
a name embeded in a symbol table entry or section header table entry is length 8
for Sections, Symbols and Files. No need to have a distinct constant for each
one. Also removes the Size argument to 'generateStringRef' as the size is
always 'XCOFF::NameSize'.
llvm-svn: 368584
For type values that do not have proper names, print reasonable representation
in llvm-nm, llvm-readobj and llvm-readelf, matching GNU tools.s
Fixes PR41713.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65537
llvm-svn: 368451
This updates all libraries and tools in LLVM Core to use 64-bit offsets
which directly or indirectly come to DataExtractor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65638
llvm-svn: 368014
Change MAXSECTALIGN to a public MaxSectionAlignment in MachOUniversal.
Will be used in a follow-up.
Patch by Anusha Basana <anusha.basana@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65117
llvm-svn: 366969
llvm-ar outputs a strange error message when handling archives with
members larger than 4GB due to not checking file size when passing the
value as an unsigned 32 bit integer. This overflow issue caused
malformed archives to be created.:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38058
This change allows for members above 4GB and will error in a case that
is over the formats size limit, a 10 digit decimal integer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65093
llvm-svn: 366813
It is necessary to generate fixups in .debug_frame or .eh_frame as
relaxation is enabled due to the address delta may be changed after
relaxation.
There is an opcode with 6-bits data in debug frame encoding. So, we
also need 6-bits fixup types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58335
llvm-svn: 366524
Summary:
Some polish for r365099 which adds a static initializer to
MachOObjectFile. Remove it by moving it to file scope.
Reviewers: smeenai, alexshap, compnerd, mtrent, anushabasana
Reviewed By: smeenai
Subscribers: hiraditya, jkorous, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64873
llvm-svn: 366496
It is necessary to generate fixups in .debug_frame or .eh_frame as
relaxation is enabled due to the address delta may be changed after
relaxation.
There is an opcode with 6-bits data in debug frame encoding. So, we
also need 6-bits fixup types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58335
llvm-svn: 366442
When code relaxation is enabled many RISC-V fixups are not resolved but
instead relocations are emitted. This happens even for DWARF debug
sections. Therefore, to properly support the parsing of DWARF debug info
we need to be able to resolve RISC-V relocations. This patch adds:
* Support for RISC-V relocations in RelocationResolver
* DWARF support for two relocations per object file offset
* DWARF changes to support relocations in more DIE fields
The two relocations per offset change is needed because some RISC-V
relocations (used for label differences) come in pairs.
Relocations can also be emitted for DWARF fields where relocations were
not yet evaluated. Adding relocation support for some of these fields is
essencial. On the other hand, LLVM currently emits RISC-V relocations
for fixups that could be safely evaluated, since they can never be
affected by code relaxations. This patch also adds relocation support
for the fields affected by those extraneous relocations (the DWARF unit
entry Length, and the DWARF debug line entry TotalLength and
PrologueLength), for testing purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62062
Patch by Luís Marques.
llvm-svn: 366402
Summary:
On Windows, Posix integer file descriptors are a compatibility layer
over native file handles provided by the C runtime. There is a hard
limit on the maximum number of file descriptors that a process can open,
and the limit is 8192. LLD typically doesn't run into this limit because
it opens input files, maps them into memory, and then immediately closes
the file descriptor. This prevents it from running out of FDs.
For various reasons, I'd like to open handles to every input file and
keep them open during linking. That requires migrating MemoryBuffer over
to taking open native file handles instead of integer FDs.
Reviewers: aganea, Bigcheese
Reviewed By: aganea
Subscribers: smeenai, silvas, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits, zturner
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63453
llvm-svn: 365588
Several of the conditonal operators commited in llvm-svn: 365524 fail to compile
on the windows buildbots. Converting to an if and early return to try to fix.
llvm-svn: 365535
Adds a readobj dumper for 32-bit and 64-bit section header tables, and extend
support for the file-header dumping to include 64-bit object files. Also
refactors the binary file parsing to be done in a helper function in an attempt
to cleanup error handeling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63843
llvm-svn: 365524
The errors coming from ELF.h are usually not very
useful because they are uninformative. This patch is a
first step to improve the situation.
I tested this patch with a run of check-llvm and found
that few messages are untested. In this patch, I did not
add more tests but marked all such cases with a "TODO" comment.
For all tested messages I extended the error text to
provide more details (see test cases changed).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64014
llvm-svn: 365183
Added array of valid architectures and function returning array.
Modified llvm-lipo to include list of valid architectures in error message for invalid arch.
Patch by Anusha Basana <anusha.basana@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63735
llvm-svn: 365099
r363016 let lld-link and llvm-lib share the /machine: parsing code.
This lets llvm-cvtres share it as well.
Making llvm-cvtres depend on llvm-lib seemed a bit strange (it doesn't
need llvm-lib's dependencies on BinaryFormat and BitReader) and I
couldn't find a good place to put this code. Since it's just a few
lines, put it in lib/Object for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63120
llvm-svn: 363144
Users are exepcted to pass all .res files to the linker, which then
merges all the resource in all .res files into a tree structure and then
converts the final tree structure to a .obj file with .rsrc$01 and
.rsrc$02 sections and then links that.
If the user instead passes several .obj files containing such resources,
the correct thing to do would be to have custom code to merge the trees
in the resource sections instead of doing normal section merging -- but
link.exe rejects if multiple resource obj files are passed in with
LNK4078, so let lld-link do that too instead of silently writing broken
.rsrc sections in that case.
The only real way to run into this is if users manually convert .res
files to .obj files by running cvtres and then handing the resulting
.obj files to lld-link instead, which in practice likely never happens.
(lld-link is slightly stricter than link.exe now: If link.exe is passed
one .obj file created by cvtres, and a .res file, for some reason it
just emits a warning instead of an error and outputs strange looking
data. lld-link now errors out on mixed input like this.)
One way users could accidentally run into this is the following
scenario: If a .res file is passed to lib.exe, then lib.exe calls
cvtres.exe on the .res file before putting it in the output .lib.
(llvm-lib currently doesn't do this.)
link.exe's /wholearchive seems to only add obj files referenced from the
static library index, but lld-link current really adds all files in the
archive. So if lld-link /wholearchive is used with .lib files produced
by lib.exe and .res files were among the files handed to lib.exe, we
previously silently produced invalid output, but now we error out.
link.exe's /wholearchive semantics on the other hand mean that it
wouldn't load the resource object files from the .lib file at all.
Since this scenario is probably still an unlikely corner case,
the difference in behavior here seems fine -- and lld-link might have to
change to use link.exe's /wholearchive semantics in the future anyways.
Vaguely related to PR42180.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63109
llvm-svn: 363078
For lld, pass in Config->Timestamp (which is set based on lld's
/timestamp: and /Brepro flags). Since the writeWindowsResourceCOFF()
data is only used in-memory by LLD and the obj's timestamp isn't used
for anything in the output, this doesn't change behavior.
For llvm-cvtres, add an optional /timestamp: parameter, and use the
current behavior of calling time() if the parameter is not passed in.
This doesn't really change observable behavior (unless someone passes
/timestamp: to llvm-cvtres, which wasn't possible before), but it
removes the last unqualified call to time() from llvm/lib, which seems
like a good thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63116
llvm-svn: 363050
ELF for the 64-bit Arm Architecture defines two processor-specific dynamic
tags:
DT_AARCH64_BTI_PLT 0x70000001, d_val
DT_AARCH64_PAC_PLT 0x70000003, d_val
These presence of these tags indicate that PLT sequences have been
protected using Branch Target Identification and Pointer Authentication
respectively. The presence of both indicates that the PLT sequences have
been protected with both Branch Target Identification and Pointer
Authentication.
This patch adds the tags and tests for llvm-readobj and yaml2obj.
As some of the processor specific dynamic tags overlap, this patch splits
them up, keeping their original default value if they were not previously
mentioned explicitly in a switch case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62596
llvm-svn: 362493
Includes a fix for an introduced build failure due to a post c++11 use of std::mismatch.
This fixes some thin archive relative path issues, paths are shortened where possible and paths are output correctly when using the display table command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59491
llvm-svn: 362484
This reverts commit r362407. It broke compilation of
llvm/lib/Object/ArchiveWriter.cpp:
error: type 'llvm::sys::path::const_iterator' does not provide a call
operator
llvm-svn: 362413
This fixes some thin archive relative path issues, paths are shortened where possible and paths are output correctly when using the display table command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59491
llvm-svn: 362407
This adds:
- LLVM subtarget features to make all the new instructions conditional on,
- CPU and FPU names for use on clang's command line, with default FPUs set
so that "armv8.1-m.main+fp" and "armv8.1-m.main+fp.dp" will select the right
FPU features,
- architecture extension names "mve" and "mve.fp",
- ABI build attribute support for v8.1-M (a new value for Tag_CPU_arch) and MVE
(a new actual tag).
Patch mostly by Simon Tatham.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60698
llvm-svn: 362090
Those two subtarget features were awkward because their semantics are
reversed: each one indicates the _lack_ of support for something in
the architecture, rather than the presence. As a consequence, you
don't get the behavior you want if you combine two sets of feature
bits.
Each SubtargetFeature for an FP architecture version now comes in four
versions, one for each combination of those options. So you can still
say (for example) '+vfp2' in a feature string and it will mean what
it's always meant, but there's a new string '+vfp2d16sp' meaning the
version without those extra options.
A lot of this change is just mechanically replacing positive checks
for the old features with negative checks for the new ones. But one
more interesting change is that I've rearranged getFPUFeatures() so
that the main FPU feature is appended to the output list *before*
rather than after the features derived from the Restriction field, so
that -fp64 and -d32 can override defaults added by the main feature.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: srhines, javed.absar, eraman, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, zzheng, Petar.Avramovic, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60691
llvm-svn: 361845
Summary:
This patch implement parsing symbol table for xcoffobjfile and
output as yaml format. Parsing auxiliary entries of a symbol
will be in a separate patch.
The XCOFF object file (aix_xcoff.o) used in the test comes from
-bash-4.2$ cat test.c
extern int i;
extern int TestforXcoff;
int main()
{
i++;
TestforXcoff--;
}
Patch by DiggerLin
Reviewers: sfertile, hubert.reinterpretcast, MaskRay, daltenty
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61532
llvm-svn: 361832
This adds proper handling of the NONAME-keyword, which makes llvm-dlltool
generate an import using the ordinal instead of the name.
Patch by by Jannik Vogel, test added by Stefan Schmidt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62175
llvm-svn: 361367
This patch implements a limited form of autolinking primarily designed to allow
either the --dependent-library compiler option, or "comment lib" pragmas (
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/preprocessor/comment-c-cpp?view=vs-2017) in
C/C++ e.g. #pragma comment(lib, "foo"), to cause an ELF linker to automatically
add the specified library to the link when processing the input file generated
by the compiler.
Currently this extension is unique to LLVM and LLD. However, care has been taken
to design this feature so that it could be supported by other ELF linkers.
The design goals were to provide:
- A simple linking model for developers to reason about.
- The ability to to override autolinking from the linker command line.
- Source code compatibility, where possible, with "comment lib" pragmas in other
environments (MSVC in particular).
Dependent library support is implemented differently for ELF platforms than on
the other platforms. Primarily this difference is that on ELF we pass the
dependent library specifiers directly to the linker without manipulating them.
This is in contrast to other platforms where they are mapped to a specific
linker option by the compiler. This difference is a result of the greater
variety of ELF linkers and the fact that ELF linkers tend to handle libraries in
a more complicated fashion than on other platforms. This forces us to defer
handling the specifiers to the linker.
In order to achieve a level of source code compatibility with other platforms
we have restricted this feature to work with libraries that meet the following
"reasonable" requirements:
1. There are no competing defined symbols in a given set of libraries, or
if they exist, the program owner doesn't care which is linked to their
program.
2. There may be circular dependencies between libraries.
The binary representation is a mergeable string section (SHF_MERGE,
SHF_STRINGS), called .deplibs, with custom type SHT_LLVM_DEPENDENT_LIBRARIES
(0x6fff4c04). The compiler forms this section by concatenating the arguments of
the "comment lib" pragmas and --dependent-library options in the order they are
encountered. Partial (-r, -Ur) links are handled by concatenating .deplibs
sections with the normal mergeable string section rules. As an example, #pragma
comment(lib, "foo") would result in:
.section ".deplibs","MS",@llvm_dependent_libraries,1
.asciz "foo"
For LTO, equivalent information to the contents of a the .deplibs section can be
retrieved by the LLD for bitcode input files.
LLD processes the dependent library specifiers in the following way:
1. Dependent libraries which are found from the specifiers in .deplibs sections
of relocatable object files are added when the linker decides to include that
file (which could itself be in a library) in the link. Dependent libraries
behave as if they were appended to the command line after all other options. As
a consequence the set of dependent libraries are searched last to resolve
symbols.
2. It is an error if a file cannot be found for a given specifier.
3. Any command line options in effect at the end of the command line parsing apply
to the dependent libraries, e.g. --whole-archive.
4. The linker tries to add a library or relocatable object file from each of the
strings in a .deplibs section by; first, handling the string as if it was
specified on the command line; second, by looking for the string in each of the
library search paths in turn; third, by looking for a lib<string>.a or
lib<string>.so (depending on the current mode of the linker) in each of the
library search paths.
5. A new command line option --no-dependent-libraries tells LLD to ignore the
dependent libraries.
Rationale for the above points:
1. Adding the dependent libraries last makes the process simple to understand
from a developers perspective. All linkers are able to implement this scheme.
2. Error-ing for libraries that are not found seems like better behavior than
failing the link during symbol resolution.
3. It seems useful for the user to be able to apply command line options which
will affect all of the dependent libraries. There is a potential problem of
surprise for developers, who might not realize that these options would apply
to these "invisible" input files; however, despite the potential for surprise,
this is easy for developers to reason about and gives developers the control
that they may require.
4. This algorithm takes into account all of the different ways that ELF linkers
find input files. The different search methods are tried by the linker in most
obvious to least obvious order.
5. I considered adding finer grained control over which dependent libraries were
ignored (e.g. MSVC has /nodefaultlib:<library>); however, I concluded that this
is not necessary: if finer control is required developers can fall back to using
the command line directly.
RFC thread: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-March/131004.html.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60274
llvm-svn: 360984
Summary:
the stream format is exactly the same as for ThreadList and ModuleList
streams, only the entry types are slightly different, so the changes in
this patch are just straight-forward applications of established
patterns.
Reviewers: amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: markmentovai, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61885
llvm-svn: 360908
r360876 didn't fix 2 call sites in clang.
Expected<ArrayRef<uint8_t>> may be better but use Expected<StringRef> for now.
Follow-up of D61781.
llvm-svn: 360892
It broke the Clang build, see llvm-commits thread.
> Expected<ArrayRef<uint8_t>> may be better but use Expected<StringRef> for now.
>
> Follow-up of D61781.
llvm-svn: 360878
This adds support for the arm64_32 watchOS ABI to LLVM's low level tools,
teaching them about the specific MachO choices and constants needed to
disassemble things.
llvm-svn: 360663
Change
std::error_code getSectionContents(DataRefImpl, StringRef &) const;
to
Expected<ArrayRef<uint8_t>> getSectionContents(DataRefImpl) const;
Many object formats use ArrayRef<uint8_t> as the underlying type, which
is generally better than StringRef to represent binary data, so change
the type to decrease the number of type conversions.
Reviewed By: ruiu, sbc100
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61781
llvm-svn: 360648
Patch adds support for dumping of file headers with llvm-readobj. XCOFF
object files are added to test dumping a well formed file, and dumping
both negative timestamps and negative symbol counts, both of which are
allowed in the XCOFF definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60878
llvm-svn: 359878
As a side benefit, lld-link now reports more than one duplicate resource
entry before exiting with an error even if the new flag is not passed.
llvm-svn: 359829
Summary:
It currently receives an output parameter and returns
std::error_code. Expected<StringRef> fits for this purpose perfectly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61421
llvm-svn: 359774
Summary:
The stream contains the list of threads belonging to the process
described by the minidump. Its structure is the same as the ModuleList
stream, and in fact, I have generalized the ModuleList reading code to
handle this stream too.
Reviewers: amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: llvm-commits, lldb-commits, markmentovai, zturner
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61064
llvm-svn: 359762
Reduces the error message from:
lld-link: error: failed to parse .res file: duplicate resource: type STRINGTABLE (ID 6)/name ID 3/language 1033, in test1.res and in test2.res
To:
lld-link: error: duplicate resource: type STRINGTABLE (ID 6)/name ID 3/language 1033, in test1.res and in test2.res
Make sure every error message emitted by cvtres contains the name of at
least one ".res" file, so that removing the "failed to parse .res file"
string doesn't lose information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61388
llvm-svn: 359749
Adds a representation of the section header table to XCOFFObjectFile,
and implements enough to dump the section headers with llvm-obdump.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60784
llvm-svn: 359244
For well-known type IDs, include the name of the type.
To not duplicate the ID->name map, make llvm-readobj call this new
function as well. It has slightly different output, so this also
requires updating a few tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61086
llvm-svn: 359153
If two .res files contain the same resource, cvtres.exe (and hence
link.exe) reject the input with this message:
CVTRES : fatal error CVT1100: duplicate resource. type:STRING, name:101, language:0x0409
LINK : fatal error LNK1123: failure during conversion to COFF: file invalid or corrupt
llvm-cvtres (and lld-link) used to silently pick one of the duplicate
resources instead. This patch makes them report an error as well.
We slightly improve on cvtres by printing the name of two .res files
containing duplicate entries as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61049
llvm-svn: 359083
Before, there was an IsData parameter. Now, there are two different
functions for data nodes and ID nodes. No behavior change, needed for a
follow-up change to make two data nodes (but not two ID nodes) with the
same ID an error.
For consistency, rename another addChild() overload to addNameChild().
llvm-svn: 359024
Summary:
This ensures that object files will continue to validate as
WebAssembly modules in the presence of bulk memory operations. Engines
that don't support bulk memory operations will not recognize the
DataCount section and will report validation errors, but that's ok
because object files aren't supposed to be run directly anyway.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff, sbc100
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60623
llvm-svn: 358315
Summary: This brings us to full feature parity with the old API, so I've deprecated it and updated the tests. I'll do a follow-up patch to do some more cleanup and documentation work in this header.
Reviewers: whitequark, deadalnix
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60407
llvm-svn: 358037
Summary:
The ModuleList stream consists of an integer giving the number of
entries in the list, followed by the list itself. Each entry in the list
describes a module (dynamically loaded objects which were loaded in the
process when it crashed (or when the minidump was generated).
The code for reading the list is relatively straight-forward, with a
single gotcha. Some minidump writers are emitting padding after the
"count" field in order to align the subsequent list on 8 byte boundary
(this depends on how their ModuleList type was defined and the native
alignment of various types on their platform). Fortunately, the minidump
format contains enough redundancy (in the form of the stream length
field in the stream directory), which allows us to detect this situation
and correct it.
This patch just adds the ability to parse the stream. Code for
conversion to/from yaml will come in a follow-up patch.
Reviewers: zturner, amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: jdoerfert, markmentovai, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60121
llvm-svn: 357897
Summary: Add an accessor for the type of a binary file.
Reviewers: whitequark, deadalnix
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: hiraditya, aheejin, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60366
llvm-svn: 357872