Reduces number of write+seek's from 88516 to 2080
when linking godoc with 6l.
Thanks to Alex Brainman for pointing out the
many small writes.
R=golang-dev, r, alex.brainman, robert.hencke
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4743043
The gosymtab and gopclntab sections were pointing to the proper
data, but that data was already owned by the rodata section.
Some ELF references explicitly prohibit multiple sections from
owning the same data, and strip behaves accordingly.
The data for these sections was moved to after rodata, and the
gosymtab and gopclntab sections now own their respective ranges.
This change makes strip happy both with and without -s being
provided at link time. Note that it won't remove these sections
because they are still allocated, and that's by design since
they are necessary at runtime for generating proper backtraces
and similar introspection operations.
Unlike the previous behavior, -s will now maintain zero-sized
gosymtab and gopclntab sections. This makes the implementation
slightly cleaner.
Fixes#1242.
NOTE: Tested on Linux amd64/386/arm only.
R=ality, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4639077
This prevents ld from generating zeroed symtab entries for
sections that aren't going to be generated because dynamic
linkage has been disabled (-d was used or no dynamic libs
were seen). Even though they were not explicitly added by
doelf, the section creation process was making them
reachable again.
The windows head is being disconsidered for this because
apparently it's not taking into account debug['d'].
This makes elflint 0.1% happier.
R=golang-dev, rsc, gustavo
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4638050
Once these changes are effected, it is possible to construct
"8l" native on a (386?) Plan 9 system, albeit with assistance
from modules such as mkfiles that are not (yet) included in any
public patches.
8l/asm.c:
. Corrected some format qualifiers.
8l/list.c:
. Cast a print() argument to (int) to match the given format.
It may be possible to change the format (%R), but I have not
looked into it.
8l/obj.c:
. Removed some unused code.
8l/span.c:
. Removed unnecessary incrementation on "bp".
. Corrected some format qualifiers.
ld/data.c:
. Corrected some format qualifiers.
. Cast print argument to (int): used as field size.
. Use braces to suppress warning about empty if() statements.
ld/dwarf.c:
. Trivial spelling mistake in comment.
ld/ldelf.c:
. Added USED() statements to silence warnings.
. Dropped redundant address (&) operators.
. corrected some format qualifiers.
. Cast to (int) for switch selection variable.
ld/macho.c:
. Added USED() statements to silence warnings.
ld/ldpe.c:
. Added USED() statements to silence warnings.
. More careful use of "sect" variable.
. Corrected some format qualifiers.
. Removed redundant assignments.
. Minor fix dropped as it was submitted separately.
ld/pe.c:
. Dropped <time.h> which is now in <u.h>.
. Dropped redundant address (&) operators.
. Added a missing variable initialisation.
ld/symtab.c:
. Added USED() statements to silence warnings.
. Removed redundant incrementation.
. Corrected some format qualifiers.
All the above have been tested against a (very) recent release
and do not seem to trigger any regressions.
All review suggestions have been incorporated.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4633043
The "elf.h" header changes involve only comments, the released
Plan 9 C preprocessing function does not cope with multiline
comments following the #define keyword. All multiline comments
have been moved to the line above the associated definition.
Sigh! Fixing the Plan 9 compiler is not an option.
<time.h> does not exist in the Plan 9 Native library. I have
moved it from src/cmd/ld/pe.h to include/u.h. RSC correctly points
out that this copy of <u.h> is not the one used to compile the
Go release on Plan 9 platforms.
R=golang-dev
CC=golang-dev, rsc
https://golang.org/cl/4574042
Makes it possible for older tools like objdump to find the filenames,
fixes objdump -d -l --start-address=0x400c00 --stop-address=0x400c36 6.out
fixes#1950
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4609043
I started looking at this code because the nm in GNU
binutils was ignoring the first symbol in the .symtab
section. Apparently, the System V ABI reserves the
first entry and requires all fields inside to be set
to zero.
The list of changes is as follows:
· reserve the first symbol entry (as noted above)
· fix the section indices for .data and .bss symbols
· factor out common code for Elf32 and Elf64
· remove the special case for elfsymo in [568]l/asm.c:/^asmb
· add the "etext" symbol in 6l
· add static symbols
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4524075
These changes are not particularly invasive and have been tested
as broadly as possible.
8l/l.h:
- #pragma varargck: added some, removed duplicates.
ld/dwarf.c:
- As Plan 9 has no NULL, changed all occurrences to nil.
- Added USED(size); where necessary.
- Added (void) argument in definition of finddebugruntimepath().
- Plan 9 compiler was complaining about multiple
assignments, repeaired by breaking up the commands.
- Correction: havedynamic = 1; restored.
ld/go.c:
- Needed USED(file); in two functions.
- Removed unused assignments flagged by the Plan 9 compiler.
ld/lib.c:
- Replaced unlink() with remove() which seems available everywhere.
- Removed USED(c4); and USED(magic) no longer required.
- Removed code flagged as unused by the Plan 9 compiler.
- Added attributes to a number of format strings.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4435047
Reenable dwarf output on Mac.
Was writing headers but no actual dwarf data.
Fixes#1877 (accidentally).
Workaround for issue 1878.
R=lvd
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4515139
This was causing a panic in the reflect package
since type.* pointers with their low bits set are
assumed to have certain flags set that disallow
the use of reflection.
Thanks to Pavel and Taru for help tracking down
this bug.
R=rsc, paulzhol, taruti
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4511041
This change will allow to generate valid executable,
even if rsc disables dwarf generation, as it happend
at revision 9a64273f9d68.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev, lvd, vcc
https://golang.org/cl/4425066
Static symbols were not being marked as such.
I also made the 'z' symbols use the first byte of
the name instead of an explicit NUL so that if
the symbol table format is ever changed, the only
place that would need updating is addhist().
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4366047
The list elements are already being allocated out of a
single memory buffer. We can drop the Link* pointer
following and the memory it requires, replacing it with
index operations.
The change also keeps a channel from containing a pointer
back into its own allocation block, which would create a
cycle. Blocks involved in cycles are not guaranteed to be
finalized properly, and channels depend on finalizers to
free OS-level locks on some systems. The self-reference
was keeping channels from being garbage collected.
runtime-gdb.py will need to be updated in order to dump
the content of buffered channels with the new data structure.
Fixes#1676.
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4411045
The ld time was dominated by symbol table processing, so
* increase hash table size
* emit fewer symbols in gc (just 1 per string, 1 per type)
* add read-only lookup to avoid creating spurious symbols
* add linked list to speed whole-table traversals
Breaks dwarf generator (no idea why), so disable dwarf.
Reduces time for 6l to link godoc by 25%.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4383047
Fixes the broken linux/amd64 build.
The symbol table, itself a symbol, was having
its size rounded up to the nearest word boundary.
If the rounding add >7 zero bytes then it confused
the debug/gosym symbol table parser. So you've
got a 1/8 chance to hit the bug on an amd64 system.
Just started in the recent change because I fixed
the rounding to round to word boundary instead
of to 4-byte boundary.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4241056
Much of the bulk of Go binaries is the symbol tables,
which give a name to every C string, Go string,
and reflection type symbol. These names are not worth
much other than seeing what's where in a binary.
This CL deletes all those names from the symbol table,
instead aggregating the symbols into contiguous blocks
and giving them the names "string.*", "go.string.*", and "type.*".
Before:
$ 6nm $(which godoc.old) | sort | grep ' string\.' | tail -10
59eda4 D string."aa87ca22be8b05378eb1c71...
59ee08 D string."b3312fa7e23ee7e4988e056...
59ee6c D string."func(*token.FileSet, st...
59eed0 D string."func(io.Writer, []uint8...
59ef34 D string."func(*tls.Config, *tls....
59ef98 D string."func(*bool, **template....
59effc D string."method(p *printer.print...
59f060 D string."method(S *scanner.Scann...
59f12c D string."func(*struct { begin in...
59f194 D string."method(ka *tls.ecdheRSA...
$
After:
$ 6nm $(which godoc) | sort | grep ' string\.' | tail -10
5e6a30 D string.*
$
Those names in the "Before" are truncated for the CL.
In the real binary they are the complete string, up to
a certain length, or else a unique identifier.
The same applies to the type and go.string symbols.
Removing the names cuts godoc by more than half:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc rsc 9153405 2011-03-07 23:19 godoc.old
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc rsc 4290071 2011-03-07 23:19 godoc
For what it's worth, only 80% of what's left gets loaded
into memory; the other 20% is dwarf debugging information
only ever accessed by gdb:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc rsc 3397787 2011-03-07 23:19 godoc.nodwarf
R=r, cw
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4245072
The pointer will eventually let us find *T given T.
This CL just makes room for it, always storing a zero.
R=r, r2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4221046
A reference to the address of weak.foo resolves at link time
to the address of the symbol foo if foo would end up in the
binary anyway, or to zero if foo would not be in the binary.
For example:
int xxx = 1;
int yyy = 2;
int weak·xxx;
int weak·yyy;
void main·main(void) {
runtime·printf("%p %p %p\n", &xxx, &weak·xxx, &weak·yyy);
}
prints the same non-nil address twice, then 0 (because yyy is not
referenced so it was dropped from the binary).
This will be used by the reflection tables.
R=iant
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4223044
Fix problems found.
On amd64, various library routines had bigger
stack frames than expected, because large function
calls had been added.
runtime.assertI2T: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.assertI2T
8 after runtime.assertI2T uses 112
0 on entry to runtime.newTypeAssertionError
-8 on entry to runtime.morestack01
runtime.assertE2E: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.assertE2E
16 after runtime.assertE2E uses 104
8 on entry to runtime.panic
0 on entry to runtime.morestack16
-8 after runtime.morestack16 uses 8
runtime.assertE2T: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.assertE2T
16 after runtime.assertE2T uses 104
8 on entry to runtime.panic
0 on entry to runtime.morestack16
-8 after runtime.morestack16 uses 8
runtime.newselect: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.newselect
56 after runtime.newselect uses 64
48 on entry to runtime.printf
8 after runtime.printf uses 40
0 on entry to vprintf
-8 on entry to runtime.morestack16
runtime.selectdefault: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.selectdefault
56 after runtime.selectdefault uses 64
48 on entry to runtime.printf
8 after runtime.printf uses 40
0 on entry to vprintf
-8 on entry to runtime.morestack16
runtime.selectgo: nosplit stack overflow
120 assumed on entry to runtime.selectgo
0 after runtime.selectgo uses 120
-8 on entry to runtime.gosched
On arm, 5c was tagging functions NOSPLIT that should
not have been, like the recursive function printpanics:
printpanics: nosplit stack overflow
124 assumed on entry to printpanics
112 after printpanics uses 12
108 on entry to printpanics
96 after printpanics uses 12
92 on entry to printpanics
80 after printpanics uses 12
76 on entry to printpanics
64 after printpanics uses 12
60 on entry to printpanics
48 after printpanics uses 12
44 on entry to printpanics
32 after printpanics uses 12
28 on entry to printpanics
16 after printpanics uses 12
12 on entry to printpanics
0 after printpanics uses 12
-4 on entry to printpanics
R=r, r2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4188061
Program listed http://code.google.com/p/go/issues/detail?id=1495
(with nRequester set to 10000) will crash with
runtime: failed to create new OS thread (have 4526 already; errno=8)
instead of
runtime: failed to create new OS thread (have 618 already; errno=8).
R=golang-dev, rsc, vcc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4172046
The object files begin with a header that is
$GOARCH
on a line by itself. This CL changes that header to
go object $GOOS $GOARCH release.2011-01-01 4567+
where the final two fields are the most recent release
tag and the current hg version number.
All objects imported into a Go compilation or linked into an
executable must have the same header line, and that header
line must match the compiler and linker versions.
The effect of this will be that if you update and run all.bash
and then try to link in objects compiled with an earlier version
of the compiler (or invoke the wrong version of the compiler),
you will get an error showing the different headers instead
of perhaps silent incompatibility.
Normal usage with all.bash should be unaffected, because
all.bash deletes all the object files in $GOROOT/pkg/$GOOS_$GOARCH
and cleans all intermediate object files before starting.
This change is intended to diagnose stale objects arising when
users maintaining alternate installation directories forget to
rebuild some of their files after updating.
It should help make the adoption of $GOPATH (CL 3780043)
less error-prone.
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4023063
- fixed length of amd64 .data pe section
(don't need to include non-initialised data)
- use correct oh/oh64 variable when updating
data directory in addexports
- simplify and cleanup
R=vcc, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/4106044
* Avoid confusion between imported and exported symbols.
* Record number of imported and exported symbols correctly.
* Explictly relocate SMACHOSYM section, since it is not in datap.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3920042
The recent linker changes broke NaCl support
a month ago, and there are no known users of it.
The NaCl code can always be recovered from the
repository history.
R=adg, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3671042
If an %lld argument can be 32 or 64 bits wide, cast to vlong.
If always 32 bits, drop the ll.
Fixes#1336.
R=brainman, rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3580041
More support for references to dynamic symbols,
including full GOT and PLT for ELF objects.
For Mach-O everything ends up in the GOT: dealing
with the real lazy PLT is too hard for now so we punt.
R=iant, iant2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/3491042
8l was broken by commit 7ac0d2eed9, it caused .data to be page aligned in the file - which is not how Plan 9 expects things to be.
Also .rodata was layed out in a similar fashion.
Not sure when signame was introduced, but added a stub.
Removed the symo assignment in asm.c as it is not currently used.
Fix runtime breakage after commit 629c065d36 which prefixes all external symbols with runtime·.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2674041
Restore ability to have different file and
section alignment in generated pe file.
Stop generating .bss pe section, it is
part of .data now.
Some code refactoring.
R=rsc, vcc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2731041
Sub-symbols are laid out inside a larger symbol
but can be addressed directly.
Use to make Mach-O pointer array not a special case.
Will use later to describe ELF sections.
Glimpses of the beginning of ELF loading.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2623043
Load the entire archive file instead.
Reduces I/O by avoiding additional passes
through libraries to resolve symbols.
Go packages always need all the files anyway
(most often, all 1 of them).
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2613042
Just enough to make mov instructions work,
which in turn is enough to make strconv work
when it avoids any floating point calculations.
That makes a bunch of other packages pass
their tests.
Should suffice until hardware floating point
is available.
Enable package tests that now pass
(some due to earlier fixes).
Looks like there is a new integer math bug
exposed in the fmt and json tests.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2638041
That is, move the pc/ln table and the symbol table
into the read-only data segment. This eliminates
the need for a special load command to map the
symbol table into memory, which makes the
information available on systems that couldn't handle
the magic load to 0x99000000, like NaCl and ARM QEMU
and Linux without config_highmem=y. It also
eliminates an #ifdef and some clumsy code to
find the symbol table on Windows.
The bad news is that the binary appears to be bigger
than it used to be. This is not actually the case, though:
the same amount of data is being mapped into memory
as before, and the tables are still read-only, so they're
still shared across multiple instances of the binary as
they were before. The difference is just that the tables
aren't squirreled away in some section that "size" doesn't
know to look at.
This is a checkpoint.
It probably breaks Windows and breaks NaCl more
than it used to be broken, but those will be fixed.
The logic involving -s needs to be revisited too.
Fixes#871.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2587041
Also change the span-dependent jump algorithm
to use fewer iterations:
* resolve forward jumps at their targets (comefrom list)
* mark jumps as small or big and only do small->big
* record whether a jump failed to be encodable
These changes mean that a function with only small
jumps can be laid out in a single iteration, and the
vast majority of functions take just two iterations.
I was seeing a maximum of 5 iterations before; the
max now is 3 and there are fewer that get even that far.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2537041
Using explicit relocations internally, we can
represent the data for a particular symbol as
an initialized block of memory instead of a
linked list of ADATA instructions. The real
goal here is to be able to hand off some of the
relocations to the dynamic linker when interacting
with system libraries, but a pleasant side effect is
that the memory image is much more compact
than the ADATA list, so the linkers use less memory.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2512041
The Plan 9 tools assume that long is 32 bits.
We converted all instances of long to int32 when
importing the code but missed the print formats.
Because int32 is always int on the compilers we use,
it is never correct to use %lux, %ld, etc. Convert to %ux, %d, etc.
(It matters because on 64-bit gcc, long is 64 bits,
so we were printing 32-bit quantities with 64-bit formats.)
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2491041
* Maintain Sym* list for text with individual
prog lists instead of using one huge list and
overloading p->pcond.
* Comment what each file is for.
* Move some output code from span.c to asm.c.
* Move profiling into prof.c, symbol table into symtab.c.
* Move mkfwd to ld/lib.c.
* Throw away dhog dynamic loading code.
* Throw away Alef become.
* Fix printing of WORD instructions in 5l -a.
Goal here is to be able to handle each piece of text or data
as a separate piece, both to make it easier to load the
occasional .o file and also to make it possible to split the
work across multiple threads.
R=ken2, r, ken3
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2335043
This is entirely adding and removing tabs.
It looks weird but will make the diffs for the
next change easier to read.
R=ken2
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2490041
6l was skipping emitting the (2 byte) symbol table if there were no imported or exported
symbols. You can't just drop the symbol table entirely - the linker dies if you have
a linkedit section but no table. You can omit the linkedit section or both the linkedit
and the dlyd parts in the right circumstances, but that seems much more risky to me.
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/2421042
The Makefile and cgo now rewrite / to _ when creating the path.
The .so for gosqlite.googlecode.com/hg/sqlite is named
cgo_gosqlite.googlecode.com_hg_sqlite.so, and then 6l and 8l
both include a default rpath of $GOROOT/pkg/$GOOS_$GOARCH.
This should make it easier to move binaries from one system
to another.
Fixes#857.
R=iant, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/1700048
eliminates spurious multiple initialization errors.
give more information in the multiple init errors that remain.
Fixes#87.
R=r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/194052
5g/6g/8g: add import statements to export metadata, mapping package path to package name.
recognize "" as the path of the package in export metadata.
use "" as the path of the package in object symbol names.
5c/6c/8c, 5a/6a/8a: rewrite leading . to "". so that ·Sin means Sin in this package.
5l/6l/8l: rewrite "" in symbol names as object files are read.
gotest: handle new symbol names.
gopack: handle new import lines in export metadata.
Collectively, these changes eliminate the assumption of a global
name space in the object file formats. Higher level pieces such as
reflect and the computation of type hashes still depend on the
assumption; we're not done yet.
R=ken2, r, ken3
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/186263
* switch to real dot (.) instead of center dot (·) everywhere in object files.
before it was half and half depending on where in the name it appeared.
* in 6c/6a/etc identifiers, · can still be used but turns into . immediately.
* in export metadata, replace package identifiers with quoted strings
(still package names, not paths).
R=ken2, r
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/190076
by definition, they know what they are building for.
makes it easier to switch architectures when testing.
% 6g x.go
% 6l x.6
% 6.out
"Wed Jan 13 10:57:46 EST 2010"
% 8g x.go
% 8l x.8
% 8.out
"Wed Jan 13 10:57:46 EST 2010"
% echo $GOARCH
%
R=rsc
CC=golang-dev
https://golang.org/cl/186116
because they are in package runtime.
another step to enforcing package boundaries.
R=r
DELTA=732 (114 added, 93 deleted, 525 changed)
OCL=35811
CL=35824
better mach binaries.
cgo working on darwin+linux amd64+386.
eliminated context switches - pi is 30x faster.
add libcgo to build.
on snow leopard:
- non-cgo binaries work; all tests pass.
- cgo binaries work on amd64 but not 386.
R=r
DELTA=2031 (1316 added, 626 deleted, 89 changed)
OCL=35264
CL=35304
if first function in file was dead code, it was being
discarded along with the file name information for that file.
leave the functions in the master function list longer:
let xfol take the dead code out of the code list,
and let span skip the unreachable functions during output.
before
throw: sys·mapaccess1: key not in map
panic PC=0x2e7b20
throw+0x33 /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/runtime.c:65
throw(0x5834f, 0x0)
sys·mapaccess1+0x73 /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/hashmap.c:769
sys·mapaccess1(0x2b9bd0, 0x0)
gob·*Encoder·Encode+0x16b /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/fmt/print.go:2926
gob·*Encoder·Encode(0x2bb440, 0x0, 0x558b0, 0x0, 0x2e4be0, ...)
main·walk+0x331 :1603
main·walk(0x33a480, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 :1596
main·walk(0x300640, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 :1596
main·walk(0x300520, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 :1596
main·walk(0x300240, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 :1596
main·walk(0x678f8, 0x0)
main·main+0x22 :1610
main·main()
after
throw: sys·mapaccess1: key not in map
panic PC=0x2e7b20
throw+0x33 /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/runtime.c:65
throw(0x5834f, 0x0)
sys·mapaccess1+0x73 /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/hashmap.c:769
sys·mapaccess1(0x2b9bd0, 0x0)
gob·*Encoder·Encode+0x16b /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/gob/encoder.go:319
gob·*Encoder·Encode(0x2bb3c0, 0x0, 0x558b0, 0x0, 0x2e4be0, ...)
main·walk+0x331 /Users/rsc/dir.go:121
main·walk(0x2f6ab0, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 /Users/rsc/dir.go:114
main·walk(0x301640, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 /Users/rsc/dir.go:114
main·walk(0x301520, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 /Users/rsc/dir.go:114
main·walk(0x301240, 0x0)
main·walk+0x271 /Users/rsc/dir.go:114
main·walk(0x678f8, 0x0)
main·main+0x22 /Users/rsc/dir.go:128
main·main()
mainstart+0xe /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/amd64/asm.s:55
mainstart()
goexit /Users/rsc/go/src/pkg/runtime/proc.c:133
goexit()
R=r
DELTA=46 (20 added, 25 deleted, 1 changed)
OCL=34094
CL=34103
in a .6 file, an export line
//ffi T localfib remotefib remote.so
means the dynamic linker should initialize
localfib, always a pointer, to the address of
remotefib, either text (T) or data (D) after
loading remote.so.
the C compiler will generate an export section
when given the pragmas
#pragma package fib
#pragma ffi T localfib remotefib remote.so
needing #pragma package is a bit of a kludge
and hopefully could go away later.
this is just the 6 tool chain support.
other architectures will happen once 6 settles down.
code using this to do FFI is in a later CL.
R=r
DELTA=161 (141 added, 14 deleted, 6 changed)
OCL=33783
CL=33795
* use //ffi comments in package import data
to generate relocation entries and library loads.
* call initffi in rt0.s if present
R=r
DELTA=117 (91 added, 3 deleted, 23 changed)
OCL=33739
CL=33750
* remove now-unused D_SBIG (was for typestrings)
* rename elf64.[ch] to elf.[ch]
* pull in elf headers from FreeBSD instead of writing our own
* emit non-header ELF data in data section
* stub out a few more ELF sections needed for dynamic loading
R=r
DELTA=1928 (1237 added, 635 deleted, 56 changed)
OCL=33642
CL=33658
introduced explicit "data" symbol instead of etext
to mark beginning of data, so that using larger
alignment (i.e. 4MB like GNU loader) doesn't
confuse garbage collector.
split dodata into dodata and dobss in preparation
for putting the dynamic data + headers in the data
segment instead of stuffed at the beginning of the binary.
R=r
DELTA=52 (37 added, 3 deleted, 12 changed)
OCL=33610
CL=33618
archive size +70%
binary size +30%
old
wreck.mtv=; ls -l /Users/rsc/bin/{godoc,gofmt}
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc eng 1487922 Aug 13 13:21 /Users/rsc/bin/godoc
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc eng 995995 Aug 13 13:21 /Users/rsc/bin/gofmt
wreck.mtv=; du -sh $GOROOT/pkg/
9.5M /home/rsc/go/pkg/
wreck.mtv=;
new
wreck.mtv=; ls -l /Users/rsc/bin/{godoc,gofmt}
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc eng 2014390 Aug 13 14:25 /Users/rsc/bin/godoc
-rwxr-xr-x 1 rsc eng 1268705 Aug 13 14:25 /Users/rsc/bin/gofmt
wreck.mtv=; du -sh $GOROOT/pkg
16M /home/rsc/go/pkg
wreck.mtv=;
R=ken
OCL=33217
CL=33220
as go is concerned). the -d flag is now flipped; as on the mac, -d disables dynamic.
much remains to be improved to move the output closer to the gcc format.
R=rsc
DELTA=366 (310 added, 30 deleted, 26 changed)
OCL=31929
CL=31951
(in the same package).
allow forward method declaration to be satisfied
by implementation in another file (in the same package).
all methods must be declared in the same file
as the receiver type.
R=ken
OCL=30864
CL=30869
editing the firstp list was ineffective,
because follow rebuilds it from the textp list.
the symbols for dead code were being dropped
from the binary but the code was all still there.
text for fmt.Printf("hello, world\n") drops
from 143945 to 128650.
R=r,ken
DELTA=22 (20 added, 0 deleted, 2 changed)
OCL=28255
CL=28290
into gc directory, where it gets included as ../gc/ldbody
this is similar to the assemblers including ../cc/lexbody
and ../cc/macbody.
* hook go-specific loader code into 8l.
* make current 8.out.h and 6.out.h backward compatible
with plan 9's versions. i had added some constants in
the middle of enums and have now moved them to the end.
this keeps us from invalidating old .8 and .6 files.
not sure how much it really matters, but easy to do.
R=r
DELTA=1314 (667 added, 623 deleted, 24 changed)
OCL=26938
CL=26941