Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Bertalan f2c7f75f61 [lld-macho] Support creating N_SO stab for DWARF5 compile units
In DWARF5, the `DW_AT_name` and `DW_AT_comp_dir` attributes are encoded
using the `strx*` forms, which specify an index into `__debug_str_offs`.
This commit adds that section to DwarfObject, so the debug info parser
can resolve these references.

The test case was manually adapted from stabs-icf.s.

Fixes #51668

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130559
2022-07-28 09:58:26 +02:00
Daniel Bertalan 5792797c5b Reland "[lld-macho] Show source information for undefined references"
The error used to look like this:

  ld64.lld: error: undefined symbol: _foo
  >>> referenced by /path/to/bar.o:(symbol _baz+0x4)

If DWARF line information is available, we now show where in the source
the references are coming from:

  ld64.lld: error: unreferenced symbol: _foo
  >>> referenced by: bar.cpp:42 (/path/to/bar.cpp:42)
  >>>                /path/to/bar.o:(symbol _baz+0x4)

The reland is identical to the first time this landed. The fix was in D128294.
This reverts commit 0cc7ad4175.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128184
2022-06-21 18:50:06 -04:00
Nico Weber 0cc7ad4175 Revert "[lld-macho] Show source information for undefined references"
This reverts commit cd7624f153.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D128184#3597534
2022-06-20 19:15:57 -04:00
Daniel Bertalan cd7624f153 [lld-macho] Show source information for undefined references
The error used to look like this:

  ld64.lld: error: undefined symbol: _foo
  >>> referenced by /path/to/bar.o:(symbol _baz+0x4)

If DWARF line information is available, we now show where in the source
the references are coming from:

  ld64.lld: error: unreferenced symbol: _foo
  >>> referenced by: bar.cpp:42 (/path/to/bar.cpp:42)
  >>>                /path/to/bar.o:(symbol _baz+0x4)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128184
2022-06-20 18:49:42 -04:00
Jez Ng f6b6e72143 [lld-macho] Factor out common InputSection members
We have been creating many ConcatInputSections with identical values due
to .subsections_via_symbols. This diff factors out the identical values
into a Shared struct, to reduce memory consumption and make copying
cheaper.

I also changed `callSiteCount` from a uint32_t to a 31-bit field to save an
extra word.

All in all, this takes InputSection from 120 to 72 bytes (and
ConcatInputSection from 160 to 112 bytes), i.e. 30% size reduction in
ConcatInputSection.

Numbers for linking chromium_framework on my 3.2 GHz 16-Core Intel Xeon W:

      N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
  x  20          4.14          4.24          4.18         4.183   0.027548999
  +  20          4.04          4.11         4.075        4.0775   0.018027756
  Difference at 95.0% confidence
          -0.1055 +/- 0.0149005
          -2.52211% +/- 0.356215%
          (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0232803)

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105305
2021-07-01 21:22:39 -04:00
Greg McGary 465204d63a [lld-macho][NFC] define more strings in section_names:: and segment_names::
As preparation for a subsequent diff that implements builtin section renaming, define more `constexpr` strings in namespaces `lld::macho::segment_names` and `lld::macho::section_names`, and use them to replace string literals.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101393
2021-04-27 17:48:45 -07:00
Greg McGary 98fe9e41f7 [lld-macho][NFC] add const to pointer/reference induction variables of range-based for loops
Pointer and reference induction variables of range-based for loops are often const, and code authors often lax about qualifying them.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98317
2021-03-10 12:07:31 -08:00
Jez Ng 863f7a745e [lld-macho] Don't attempt to emit rebase opcodes for debug sections
This was causing a crash as we were attempting to look up the
nonexistent parent OutputSection of the debug sections. We didn't detect
it earlier because there was no test for PIEs with debug info (PIEs
require us to emit rebases for X86_64_RELOC_UNSIGNED).

This diff filters out the debug sections while loading the ObjFiles. In
addition to fixing the above problem, it also lets us avoid doing
redundant work -- we no longer parse / apply relocations / attempt to
emit dyld opcodes for these sections that we don't emit.

Fixes llvm.org/PR48392.

Reviewed By: thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92904
2020-12-10 15:57:51 -08:00
Jez Ng 3fcb0eeb15 [lld-macho] Emit STABS symbols for debugging, and drop debug sections
Debug sections contain a large amount of data. In order not to bloat the size
of the final binary, we remove them and instead emit STABS symbols for
`dsymutil` and the debugger to locate their contents in the object files.

With this diff, `dsymutil` is able to locate the debug info. However, we need
a few more features before `lldb` is able to work well with our binaries --
e.g. having `LC_DYSYMTAB` accurately reflect the number of local symbols,
emitting `LC_UUID`, and more. Those will be handled in follow-up diffs.

Note also that the STABS we emit differ slightly from what ld64 does. First, we
emit the path to the source file as one `N_SO` symbol instead of two. (`ld64`
emits one `N_SO` for the dirname and one of the basename.) Second, we do not
emit `N_BNSYM` and `N_ENSYM` STABS to mark the start and end of functions,
because the `N_FUN` STABS already serve that purpose. @clayborg recommended
these changes based on his knowledge of what the debugging tools look for.

Additionally, this current implementation doesn't accurately reflect the size
of function symbols. It uses the size of their containing sectioins as a proxy,
but that is only accurate if `.subsections_with_symbols` is set, and if there
isn't an `N_ALT_ENTRY` in that particular subsection. I think we have two
options to solve this:

1. We can split up subsections by symbol even if `.subsections_with_symbols`
   is not set, but include constraints to ensure those subsections retain
   their order in the final output. This is `ld64`'s approach.
2. We could just add a `size` field to our `Symbol` class. This seems simpler,
   and I'm more inclined toward it, but I'm not sure if there are use cases
   that it doesn't handle well. As such I'm punting on the decision for now.

Reviewed By: clayborg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89257
2020-12-01 15:05:20 -08:00