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liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// Derived from Inferno utils/6l/l.h and related files.
// http://code.google.com/p/inferno-os/source/browse/utils/6l/l.h
//
// Copyright © 1994-1999 Lucent Technologies Inc. All rights reserved.
// Portions Copyright © 1995-1997 C H Forsyth (forsyth@terzarima.net)
// Portions Copyright © 1997-1999 Vita Nuova Limited
// Portions Copyright © 2000-2007 Vita Nuova Holdings Limited (www.vitanuova.com)
// Portions Copyright © 2004,2006 Bruce Ellis
// Portions Copyright © 2005-2007 C H Forsyth (forsyth@terzarima.net)
// Revisions Copyright © 2000-2007 Lucent Technologies Inc. and others
// Portions Copyright © 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
typedef struct Addr Addr;
typedef struct Prog Prog;
typedef struct LSym LSym;
typedef struct Reloc Reloc;
typedef struct Auto Auto;
typedef struct Hist Hist;
typedef struct Link Link;
typedef struct Plist Plist;
typedef struct LinkArch LinkArch;
typedef struct Library Library;
typedef struct Pcln Pcln;
typedef struct Pcdata Pcdata;
typedef struct Pciter Pciter;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// prevent incompatible type signatures between liblink and 8l on Plan 9
#pragma incomplete struct Node
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
struct Addr
{
vlong offset;
union
{
char sval[8];
float64 dval;
Prog* branch; // for 5g, 6g, 8g
} u;
LSym* sym;
LSym* gotype;
short type;
uint8 index;
int8 scale;
int8 reg; // for 5l
int8 name; // for 5l
int8 class; // for 5l
uint8 etype; // for 5g, 6g, 8g
int32 offset2; // for 5l, 8l
struct Node* node; // for 5g, 6g, 8g
int64 width; // for 5g, 6g, 8g
};
struct Reloc
{
int32 off;
uchar siz;
uchar done;
int32 type;
int64 add;
int64 xadd;
LSym* sym;
LSym* xsym;
};
struct Prog
{
vlong pc;
int32 lineno;
Prog* link;
short as;
uchar reg; // arm only
uchar scond; // arm only
Addr from;
Addr to;
// for 5g, 6g, 8g internal use
void* opt;
// for 5l, 6l, 8l internal use
Prog* forwd;
Prog* pcond;
Prog* comefrom; // 6l, 8l
Prog* pcrel; // 5l
int32 spadj;
uchar mark;
uchar back; // 6l, 8l
uchar ft; /* 6l, 8l oclass cache */
uchar tt; // 6l, 8l
uint16 optab; // 5l
uchar isize; // 6l, 8l
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
char width; /* fake for DATA */
char mode; /* 16, 32, or 64 in 6l, 8l; internal use in 5g, 6g, 8g */
/*c2go uchar TEXTFLAG; */
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
};
// prevent incompatible type signatures between liblink and 8l on Plan 9
#pragma incomplete struct Section
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
struct LSym
{
char* name;
char* extname; // name used in external object files
short type;
short version;
uchar dupok;
uchar external;
uchar nosplit;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
uchar reachable;
uchar cgoexport;
uchar special;
uchar stkcheck;
uchar hide;
uchar leaf; // arm only
uchar fnptr; // arm only
uchar seenglobl;
liblink: fix incorrect hash collision in lookup linklookup uses hash(name, v) as the hash table index but then only compares name to find a symbol to return. If hash(name, v1) == hash(name, v2) for v1 != v2, the lookup for v2 will return the symbol with v1. The input routines assume that each symbol is found only once, and then each symbol is added to a linked list, with the list header in the symbol. Adding a symbol to such a list multiple times short-circuits the list the second time it is added, causing symbols to be dropped. The liblink rewrite introduced an elegant, if inefficient, handling of duplicated symbols by creating a dummy symbol to read the duplicate into. The dummy symbols are named .dup with sequential version numbers. With many .dup symbols, eventually there will be a conflict, causing a duplicate list add, causing elided symbols, causing a crash when calling one of the elided symbols. The bug is old (2011) but could not have manifested until the liblink rewrite introduced this heavily duplicated symbol .dup. (See History section below.) 1. Correct the lookup function. 2. Since we want all the .dup symbols to be different, there's no point in inserting them into the table. Call linknewsym directly, avoiding the lookup function entirely. 3. Since nothing can refer to the .dup symbols, do not bother adding them to the list of functions (textp) at all. 4. In lieu of a unit test, introduce additional consistency checks to detect adding a symbol to a list multiple times. This would have caught the short-circuit more directly, and it will detect a variety of double-use bugs, including the one arising from the bad lookup. Fixes #7749. History On April 9, 2011, I submitted CL 4383047, making ld 25% faster. Much of the focus was on the hash table lookup function, and one of the changes was to remove the s->version == v comparison [1]. I don't know if this was a simple editing error or if I reasoned that same name but different v would yield a different hash slot and so the name test alone sufficed. It is tempting to claim the former, but it was probably the latter. Because the hash is an iterated multiply+add, the version ends up adding v*3ⁿ to the hash, where n is the length of the name. A collision would need x*3ⁿ ≡ y*3ⁿ (mod 2²⁴ mod 100003), or equivalently x*3ⁿ ≡ x*3ⁿ + (y-x)*3ⁿ (mod 2²⁴ mod 100003), so collisions will actually be periodic: versions x and y collide when d = y-x satisfies d*3ⁿ ≡ 0 (mod 2²⁴ mod 100003). Since we allocate version numbers sequentially, this is actually about the best case one could imagine: the collision rate is much lower than if the hash were more random. http://play.golang.org/p/TScD41c_hA computes the collision period for various name lengths. The most common symbol in the new linker is .dup, and for n=4 the period is maximized: the 100004th symbol is the first collision. Unfortunately, there are programs with more duplicated symbols than that. In Go 1.2 and before, duplicate symbols were handled without creating a dummy symbol, so this particular case for generating many duplicate symbols could not happen. Go does not use versioned symbols. Only C does; each input file gives a different version to its static declarations. There just aren't enough C files for this to come up in that context. So the bug is old but the realization of the bug is new. [1] https://golang.org/cl/4383047/diff/5001/src/cmd/ld/lib.c LGTM=minux.ma, iant, dave R=golang-codereviews, minux.ma, bradfitz, iant, dave CC=golang-codereviews, r https://golang.org/cl/87910047
2014-04-16 09:53:14 -06:00
uchar onlist; // on the textp or datap lists
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int16 symid; // for writing .5/.6/.8 files
int32 dynid;
int32 sig;
int32 plt;
int32 got;
int32 align; // if non-zero, required alignment in bytes
int32 elfsym;
int32 args; // size of stack frame incoming arguments area
int32 locals; // size of stack frame locals area (arm only?)
vlong value;
vlong size;
LSym* hash; // in hash table
LSym* allsym; // in all symbol list
LSym* next; // in text or data list
LSym* sub; // in SSUB list
LSym* outer; // container of sub
LSym* gotype;
LSym* reachparent;
LSym* queue;
char* file;
char* dynimplib;
char* dynimpvers;
struct Section* sect;
// STEXT
Auto* autom;
Prog* text;
Prog* etext;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
Pcln* pcln;
// SDATA, SBSS
uchar* p;
int np;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int32 maxp;
Reloc* r;
int32 nr;
int32 maxr;
};
// LSym.type
enum
{
Sxxx,
/* order here is order in output file */
/* readonly, executable */
STEXT,
SELFRXSECT,
/* readonly, non-executable */
STYPE,
SSTRING,
SGOSTRING,
SGOFUNC,
SRODATA,
SFUNCTAB,
STYPELINK,
SSYMTAB, // TODO: move to unmapped section
SPCLNTAB,
SELFROSECT,
/* writable, non-executable */
SMACHOPLT,
SELFSECT,
SMACHO, /* Mach-O __nl_symbol_ptr */
SMACHOGOT,
SNOPTRDATA,
SINITARR,
SDATA,
SWINDOWS,
SBSS,
SNOPTRBSS,
STLSBSS,
/* not mapped */
SXREF,
SMACHOSYMSTR,
SMACHOSYMTAB,
SMACHOINDIRECTPLT,
SMACHOINDIRECTGOT,
SFILE,
SFILEPATH,
SCONST,
SDYNIMPORT,
SHOSTOBJ,
SSUB = 1<<8, /* sub-symbol, linked from parent via ->sub list */
SMASK = SSUB - 1,
SHIDDEN = 1<<9, // hidden or local symbol
};
// Reloc.type
enum
{
R_ADDR = 1,
R_SIZE,
R_CALL, // relocation for direct PC-relative call
R_CALLARM, // relocation for ARM direct call
R_CALLIND, // marker for indirect call (no actual relocating necessary)
R_CONST,
R_PCREL,
R_TLS,
liblink: introduce TLS register on 386 and amd64 When I did the original 386 ports on Linux and OS X, I chose to define GS-relative expressions like 4(GS) as relative to the actual thread-local storage base, which was usually GS but might not be (it might be FS, or it might be a different constant offset from GS or FS). The original scope was limited but since then the rewrites have gotten out of control. Sometimes GS is rewritten, sometimes FS. Some ports do other rewrites to enable shared libraries and other linking. At no point in the code is it clear whether you are looking at the real GS/FS or some synthesized thing that will be rewritten. The code manipulating all these is duplicated in many places. The first step to fixing issue 7719 is to make the code intelligible again. This CL adds an explicit TLS pseudo-register to the 386 and amd64. As a register, TLS refers to the thread-local storage base, and it can only be loaded into another register: MOVQ TLS, AX An offset from the thread-local storage base is written off(reg)(TLS*1). Semantically it is off(reg), but the (TLS*1) annotation marks this as indexing from the loaded TLS base. This emits a relocation so that if the linker needs to adjust the offset, it can. For example: MOVQ TLS, AX MOVQ 8(AX)(TLS*1), CX // load m into CX On systems that support direct access to the TLS memory, this pair of instructions can be reduced to a direct TLS memory reference: MOVQ 8(TLS), CX // load m into CX The 2-instruction and 1-instruction forms correspond roughly to ELF TLS initial exec mode and ELF TLS local exec mode, respectively. Liblink applies this rewrite on systems that support the 1-instruction form. The decision is made using only the operating system (and probably the -shared flag, eventually), not the link mode. If some link modes on a particular operating system require the 2-instruction form, then all builds for that operating system will use the 2-instruction form, so that the link mode decision can be delayed to link time. Obviously it is late to be making changes like this, but I despair of correcting issue 7719 and issue 7164 without it. To make sure I am not changing existing behavior, I built a "hello world" program for every GOOS/GOARCH combination we have and then worked to make sure that the rewrite generates exactly the same binaries, byte for byte. There are a handful of TODOs in the code marking kludges to get the byte-for-byte property, but at least now I can explain exactly how each binary is handled. The targets I tested this way are: darwin-386 darwin-amd64 dragonfly-386 dragonfly-amd64 freebsd-386 freebsd-amd64 freebsd-arm linux-386 linux-amd64 linux-arm nacl-386 nacl-amd64p32 netbsd-386 netbsd-amd64 openbsd-386 openbsd-amd64 plan9-386 plan9-amd64 solaris-amd64 windows-386 windows-amd64 There were four exceptions to the byte-for-byte goal: windows-386 and windows-amd64 have a time stamp at bytes 137 and 138 of the header. darwin-386 and plan9-386 have five or six modified bytes in the middle of the Go symbol table, caused by editing comments in runtime/sys_{darwin,plan9}_386.s. Fixes #7164. LGTM=iant R=iant, aram, minux.ma, dave CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/87920043
2014-04-15 11:45:39 -06:00
R_TLS_LE, // TLS local exec offset from TLS segment register
R_TLS_IE, // TLS initial exec offset from TLS base pointer
R_GOTOFF,
R_PLT0,
R_PLT1,
R_PLT2,
R_USEFIELD,
};
// Auto.type
enum
{
A_AUTO = 1,
A_PARAM,
};
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
struct Auto
{
LSym* asym;
Auto* link;
int32 aoffset;
int16 type;
LSym* gotype;
};
enum
{
LINKHASH = 100003,
};
struct Hist
{
Hist* link;
char* name;
int32 line;
int32 offset;
};
struct Plist
{
LSym* name;
Prog* firstpc;
int recur;
Plist* link;
};
struct Library
{
char *objref; // object where we found the reference
char *srcref; // src file where we found the reference
char *file; // object file
char *pkg; // import path
};
struct Pcdata
{
uchar *p;
int n;
int m;
};
struct Pcln
{
Pcdata pcsp;
Pcdata pcfile;
Pcdata pcline;
Pcdata *pcdata;
int npcdata;
LSym **funcdata;
int64 *funcdataoff;
int nfuncdata;
LSym **file;
int nfile;
int mfile;
LSym *lastfile;
int lastindex;
};
// Pcdata iterator.
// for(pciterinit(ctxt, &it, &pcd); !it.done; pciternext(&it)) { it.value holds in [it.pc, it.nextpc) }
struct Pciter
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
{
Pcdata d;
uchar *p;
uint32 pc;
uint32 nextpc;
uint32 pcscale;
int32 value;
int start;
int done;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
};
void pciterinit(Link*, Pciter*, Pcdata*);
void pciternext(Pciter*);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// symbol version, incremented each time a file is loaded.
// version==1 is reserved for savehist.
enum
{
HistVersion = 1,
};
// Link holds the context for writing object code from a compiler
// to be linker input or for reading that input into the linker.
struct Link
{
int32 thechar; // '5' (arm), '6' (amd64), etc.
char* thestring; // full name of architecture ("arm", "amd64", ..)
int32 goarm; // for arm only, GOARM setting
int headtype;
LinkArch* arch;
int32 (*ignore)(char*); // do not emit names satisfying this function
int32 debugasm; // -S flag in compiler
int32 debugline; // -L flag in compiler
int32 debughist; // -O flag in linker
int32 debugread; // -W flag in linker
int32 debugvlog; // -v flag in linker
int32 debugstack; // -K flag in linker
int32 debugzerostack; // -Z flag in linker
int32 debugdivmod; // -M flag in 5l
int32 debugfloat; // -F flag in 5l
int32 debugpcln; // -O flag in linker
int32 flag_shared; // -shared flag in linker
int32 iself;
Biobuf* bso; // for -v flag
char* pathname;
int32 windows;
build: remove tmp dir names from objects, support GOROOT_FINAL again If we compile a generated file stored in a temporary directory - let's say /tmp/12345/work/x.c - then by default 6c stores the full path and then the pcln table in the final binary includes the full path. This makes repeated builds (using different temporary directories) produce different binaries, even if the inputs are the same. In the old 'go tool pack', the P flag specified a prefix to remove from all stored paths (if present), and cmd/go invoked 'go tool pack grcP $WORK' to remove references to the temporary work directory. We've changed the build to avoid pack as much as possible, under the theory that instead of making pack convert from .6 to .a, the tools should just write the .a directly and save a round of I/O. Instead of going back to invoking pack always, define a common flag -trimpath in the assemblers, C compilers, and Go compilers, implemented in liblink, and arrange for cmd/go to use the flag. Then the object files being written out have the shortened paths from the start. While we are here, reimplement pcln support for GOROOT_FINAL. A build in /tmp/go uses GOROOT=/tmp/go, but if GOROOT_FINAL=/usr/local/go is set, then a source file named /tmp/go/x.go is recorded instead as /usr/local/go/x.go. We use this so that we can prepare distributions to be installed in /usr/local/go without actually working in that directory. The conversion to liblink deleted all the old file name handling code, including the GOROOT_FINAL translation. Bring the GOROOT_FINAL translation back. Before this CL, using GOROOT_FINAL=/goroot make.bash: g% strings $(which go) | grep -c $TMPDIR 6 g% strings $(which go) | grep -c $GOROOT 793 g% After this CL: g% strings $(which go) | grep -c $TMPDIR 0 g% strings $(which go) | grep -c $GOROOT 0 g% (The references to $TMPDIR tend to be cgo-generated source files.) Adding the -trimpath flag to the assemblers required converting them to the new Go-semantics flag parser. The text in go1.3.html is copied and adjusted from go1.1.html, which is when we applied that conversion to the compilers and linkers. Fixes #6989. LGTM=iant R=r, iant CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/88300045
2014-04-15 18:46:46 -06:00
char* trimpath;
char* goroot;
char* goroot_final;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// hash table of all symbols
LSym* hash[LINKHASH];
LSym* allsym;
int32 nsymbol;
// file-line history
Hist* hist;
Hist* ehist;
// all programs
Plist* plist;
Plist* plast;
// code generation
LSym* sym_div;
LSym* sym_divu;
LSym* sym_mod;
LSym* sym_modu;
LSym* symmorestack[20];
2014-06-26 09:54:39 -06:00
LSym* tlsg;
LSym* plan9privates;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
Prog* curp;
Prog* printp;
Prog* blitrl;
Prog* elitrl;
int rexflag;
int rep; // for nacl
int repn; // for nacl
int lock; // for nacl
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int asmode;
uchar* andptr;
uchar and[100];
int64 instoffset;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int32 autosize;
int32 armsize;
// for reading input files (during linker)
vlong pc;
char** libdir;
int32 nlibdir;
int32 maxlibdir;
Library* library;
int libraryp;
int nlibrary;
int tlsoffset;
void (*diag)(char*, ...);
int mode;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
Auto* curauto;
Auto* curhist;
LSym* cursym;
int version;
LSym* textp;
LSym* etextp;
int32 histdepth;
int32 nhistfile;
LSym* filesyms;
};
enum {
LittleEndian = 0x04030201,
BigEndian = 0x01020304,
};
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// LinkArch is the definition of a single architecture.
struct LinkArch
{
char* name; // "arm", "amd64", and so on
int thechar; // '5', '6', and so on
int32 endian; // LittleEndian or BigEndian
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
void (*addstacksplit)(Link*, LSym*);
void (*assemble)(Link*, LSym*);
int (*datasize)(Prog*);
void (*follow)(Link*, LSym*);
int (*iscall)(Prog*);
int (*isdata)(Prog*);
Prog* (*prg)(void);
void (*progedit)(Link*, Prog*);
void (*settextflag)(Prog*, int);
int (*symtype)(Addr*);
int (*textflag)(Prog*);
int minlc;
int ptrsize;
int regsize;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// TODO: Give these the same values on all systems.
int D_ADDR;
int D_AUTO;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int D_BRANCH;
int D_CONST;
int D_EXTERN;
int D_FCONST;
int D_NONE;
int D_PARAM;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int D_SCONST;
int D_STATIC;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int ACALL;
int ADATA;
int AEND;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int AFUNCDATA;
int AGLOBL;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
int AJMP;
int ANOP;
int APCDATA;
int ARET;
int ATEXT;
int ATYPE;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
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int AUSEFIELD;
};
/* executable header types */
enum {
Hunknown = 0,
Hdarwin,
Hdragonfly,
Helf,
Hfreebsd,
Hlinux,
Hnacl,
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
Hnetbsd,
Hopenbsd,
Hplan9,
Hsolaris,
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
Hwindows,
};
enum
{
LinkAuto = 0,
LinkInternal,
LinkExternal,
};
extern uchar fnuxi8[8];
extern uchar fnuxi4[4];
extern uchar inuxi1[1];
extern uchar inuxi2[2];
extern uchar inuxi4[4];
extern uchar inuxi8[8];
// asm5.c
void span5(Link *ctxt, LSym *s);
int chipfloat5(Link *ctxt, float64 e);
int chipzero5(Link *ctxt, float64 e);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// asm6.c
void span6(Link *ctxt, LSym *s);
// asm8.c
void span8(Link *ctxt, LSym *s);
// data.c
vlong addaddr(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, LSym *t);
vlong addaddrplus(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, LSym *t, vlong add);
vlong addaddrplus4(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, LSym *t, vlong add);
vlong addpcrelplus(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, LSym *t, vlong add);
Reloc* addrel(LSym *s);
vlong addsize(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, LSym *t);
vlong adduint16(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, uint16 v);
vlong adduint32(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, uint32 v);
vlong adduint64(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, uint64 v);
vlong adduint8(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, uint8 v);
vlong adduintxx(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, uint64 v, int wid);
void mangle(char *file);
void savedata(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, Prog *p, char *pn);
vlong setaddr(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong off, LSym *t);
vlong setaddrplus(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong off, LSym *t, vlong add);
vlong setuint16(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong r, uint16 v);
vlong setuint32(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong r, uint32 v);
vlong setuint64(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong r, uint64 v);
vlong setuint8(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong r, uint8 v);
vlong setuintxx(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong off, uint64 v, vlong wid);
void symgrow(Link *ctxt, LSym *s, vlong siz);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// go.c
void double2ieee(uint64 *ieee, double native);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
void* emallocz(long n);
void* erealloc(void *p, long n);
char* estrdup(char *p);
char* expandpkg(char *t0, char *pkg);
// ld.c
void addhist(Link *ctxt, int32 line, int type);
void addlib(Link *ctxt, char *src, char *obj, char *path);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
void addlibpath(Link *ctxt, char *srcref, char *objref, char *file, char *pkg);
void collapsefrog(Link *ctxt, LSym *s);
void copyhistfrog(Link *ctxt, char *buf, int nbuf);
int find1(int32 l, int c);
void linkgetline(Link *ctxt, int32 line, LSym **f, int32 *l);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
void histtoauto(Link *ctxt);
void mkfwd(LSym*);
void nuxiinit(LinkArch*);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
void savehist(Link *ctxt, int32 line, int32 off);
Prog* copyp(Link*, Prog*);
Prog* appendp(Link*, Prog*);
vlong atolwhex(char*);
// list[568].c
void listinit5(void);
void listinit6(void);
void listinit8(void);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// obj.c
int linklinefmt(Link *ctxt, Fmt *fp);
void linklinehist(Link *ctxt, int lineno, char *f, int offset);
Plist* linknewplist(Link *ctxt);
void linkprfile(Link *ctxt, int32 l);
// objfile.c
void ldobjfile(Link *ctxt, Biobuf *b, char *pkg, int64 len, char *path);
void writeobj(Link *ctxt, Biobuf *b);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
// pass.c
Prog* brchain(Link *ctxt, Prog *p);
Prog* brloop(Link *ctxt, Prog *p);
void linkpatch(Link *ctxt, LSym *sym);
// pcln.c
void linkpcln(Link*, LSym*);
// sym.c
LSym* linklookup(Link *ctxt, char *name, int v);
Link* linknew(LinkArch*);
LSym* linknewsym(Link *ctxt, char *symb, int v);
LSym* linkrlookup(Link *ctxt, char *name, int v);
int linksymfmt(Fmt *f);
int headtype(char*);
char* headstr(int);
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
extern char* anames5[];
extern char* anames6[];
extern char* anames8[];
extern char* cnames5[];
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
extern LinkArch link386;
extern LinkArch linkamd64;
extern LinkArch linkamd64p32;
liblink: create new library based on linker code There is an enormous amount of code moving around in this CL, but the code is the same, and it is invoked in the same ways. This CL is preparation for the new linker structure, not the new structure itself. The new library's definition is in include/link.h. The main change is the use of a Link structure to hold all the linker-relevant state, replacing the smattering of global variables. The Link structure should both make it clearer which state must be carried around and make it possible to parallelize more easily later. The main body of the linker has moved into the architecture-independent cmd/ld directory. That includes the list of known header types, so the distinction between Hplan9x32 and Hplan9x64 is removed (no other header type distinguished 32- and 64-bit formats), and code for unused formats such as ipaq kernels has been deleted. The code being deleted from 5l, 6l, and 8l reappears in liblink or in ld. Because multiple files are being merged in the liblink directory, it is not possible to show the diffs nicely in hg. The Prog and Addr structures have been unified into an architecture-independent form and moved to link.h, where they will be shared by all tools: the assemblers, the compilers, and the linkers. The unification makes it possible to write architecture-independent traversal of Prog lists, among other benefits. The Sym structures cannot be unified: they are too fundamentally different between the linker and the compilers. Instead, liblink defines an LSym - a linker Sym - to be used in the Prog and Addr structures, and the linker now refers exclusively to LSyms. The compilers will keep using their own syms but will fill out the corresponding LSyms in the Prog and Addr structures. Although code from 5l, 6l, and 8l is now in a single library, the code has been arranged so that only one architecture needs to be linked into a particular program: 5l will not contain the code needed for x86 instruction layout, for example. The object file writing code in liblink/obj.c is from cmd/gc/obj.c. Preparation for golang.org/s/go13linker work. This CL does not build by itself. It depends on 35740044 and will be submitted at the same time. R=iant CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/35790044
2013-12-08 20:49:37 -07:00
extern LinkArch linkarm;
#pragma varargck type "A" int
#pragma varargck type "D" Addr*
#pragma varargck type "lD" Addr*
#pragma varargck type "P" Prog*
#pragma varargck type "R" int
#pragma varargck type "^" int
// TODO(ality): remove this workaround.
// It's here because Pconv in liblink/list?.c references %L.
#pragma varargck type "L" int32