These functions allow you to look up types given a name in a simple
subset of C declarator syntax (no function pointers), to look up the
types of variables given a name, and to look up the types of data
objects and the type signatures of functions given symbol table offsets.
(Despite its name, one function in this commit, ctf_lookup_symbol_name(),
is for the internal use of libctf only, and does not appear in any
public header files.)
libctf/
* ctf-lookup.c (isqualifier): New.
(ctf_lookup_by_name): Likewise.
(struct ctf_lookup_var_key): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_var): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_variable): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_symbol_name): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_by_symbol): Likewise.
(ctf_func_info): Likewise.
(ctf_func_args): Likewise.
include/
* ctf-api.h (ctf_func_info): New.
(ctf_func_args): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_by_symbol): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_by_symbol): Likewise.
(ctf_lookup_variable): Likewise.
Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate
properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a
pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are
assignment-compatible, etc).
With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via
ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types
added before the most recent call to ctf_update().
This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID
mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID.
libctf/
* ctf-decl.c: New file.
* ctf-types.c: Likewise.
* ctf-impl.h: New declarations.
include/
* ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition.
(ctf_member_f): Likewise.
(ctf_enum_f): Likewise.
(ctf_variable_f): Likewise.
(ctf_type_f): Likewise.
(ctf_type_isparent): Likewise.
(ctf_type_ischild): Likewise.
(ctf_type_resolve): Likewise.
(ctf_type_aname): Likewise.
(ctf_type_lname): Likewise.
(ctf_type_name): Likewise.
(ctf_type_sizee): Likewise.
(ctf_type_align): Likewise.
(ctf_type_kind): Likewise.
(ctf_type_reference): Likewise.
(ctf_type_pointer): Likewise.
(ctf_type_encoding): Likewise.
(ctf_type_visit): Likewise.
(ctf_type_cmp): Likewise.
(ctf_type_compat): Likewise.
(ctf_member_info): Likewise.
(ctf_array_info): Likewise.
(ctf_enum_name): Likewise.
(ctf_enum_value): Likewise.
(ctf_member_iter): Likewise.
(ctf_enum_iter): Likewise.
(ctf_type_iter): Likewise.
(ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
These functions let you open an ELF file with a customarily-named CTF
section in it, automatically opening the CTF file or archive and
associating the symbol and string tables in the ELF file with the CTF
container, so that you can look up the types of symbols in the ELF file
via ctf_lookup_by_symbol(), and so that strings can be shared between
the ELF file and CTF container, to save space.
It uses BFD machinery to do so. This has now been lightly tested and
seems to work. In particular, if you already have a bfd you can pass
it in to ctf_bfdopen(), and if you want a bfd made for you you can
call ctf_open() or ctf_fdopen(), optionally specifying a target (or
try once without a target and then again with one if you get
ECTF_BFD_AMBIGUOUS back).
We use a forward declaration for the struct bfd in ctf-api.h, so that
ctf-api.h users are not required to pull in <bfd.h>. (This is mostly
for the sake of readelf.)
libctf/
* ctf-open-bfd.c: New file.
* ctf-open.c (ctf_close): New.
* ctf-impl.h: Include bfd.h.
(ctf_file): New members ctf_data_mmapped, ctf_data_mmapped_len.
(ctf_archive_internal): New members ctfi_abfd, ctfi_data,
ctfi_bfd_close.
(ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect): New declaration.
(_CTF_SECTION): likewise.
include/
* ctf-api.h (struct bfd): New forward.
(ctf_fdopen): New.
(ctf_bfdopen): Likewise.
(ctf_open): Likewise.
(ctf_arc_open): Likewise.
If you need to store a large number of CTF containers somewhere, this
provides a dedicated facility for doing so: an mmappable archive format
like a very simple tar or ar without all the system-dependent format
horrors or need for heavy file copying, with built-in compression of
files above a particular size threshold.
libctf automatically mmap()s uncompressed elements of these archives, or
uncompresses them, as needed. (If the platform does not support mmap(),
copying into dynamically-allocated buffers is used.)
Archive iteration operations are partitioned into raw and non-raw
forms. Raw operations pass thhe raw archive contents to the callback:
non-raw forms open each member with ctf_bufopen() and pass the resulting
ctf_file_t to the iterator instead. This lets you manipulate the raw
data in the archive, or the contents interpreted as a CTF file, as
needed.
It is not yet known whether we will store CTF archives in a linked ELF
object in one of these (akin to debugdata) or whether they'll get one
section per TU plus one parent container for types shared between them.
(In the case of ELF objects with very large numbers of TUs, an archive
of all of them would seem preferable, so we might just use an archive,
and add lzma support so you can assume that .gnu_debugdata and .ctf are
compressed using the same algorithm if both are present.)
To make usage easier, the ctf_archive_t is not the on-disk
representation but an abstraction over both ctf_file_t's and archives of
many ctf_file_t's: users see both CTF archives and raw CTF files as
ctf_archive_t's upon opening, the only difference being that a raw CTF
file has only a single "archive member", named ".ctf" (the default if a
null pointer is passed in as the name). The next commit will make use
of this facility, in addition to providing the public interface to
actually open archives. (In the future, it should be possible to have
all CTF sections in an ELF file appear as an "archive" in the same
fashion.)
This machinery is also used to allow library-internal creators of
ctf_archive_t's (such as the next commit) to stash away an ELF string
and symbol table, so that all opens of members in a given archive will
use them. This lets CTF archives exploit the ELF string and symbol
table just like raw CTF files can.
(All this leads to somewhat confusing type naming. The ctf_archive_t is
a typedef for the opaque internal type, struct ctf_archive_internal: the
non-internal "struct ctf_archive" is the on-disk structure meant for
other libraries manipulating CTF files. It is probably clearest to use
the struct name for struct ctf_archive_internal inside the program, and
the typedef names outside.)
libctf/
* ctf-archive.c: New.
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_archive_internal): New type.
(ctf_arc_open_internal): New declaration.
(ctf_arc_bufopen): Likewise.
(ctf_arc_close_internal): Likewise.
include/
* ctf.h (CTFA_MAGIC): New.
(struct ctf_archive): New.
(struct ctf_archive_modent): Likewise.
* ctf-api.h (ctf_archive_member_f): New.
(ctf_archive_raw_member_f): Likewise.
(ctf_arc_write): Likewise.
(ctf_arc_close): Likewise.
(ctf_arc_open_by_name): Likewise.
(ctf_archive_iter): Likewise.
(ctf_archive_raw_iter): Likewise.
(ctf_get_arc): Likewise.
This fills in the other half of the opening/creation puzzle: opening of
already-existing CTF files. Such files are always read-only: if you
want to add to a CTF file opened with one of the opening functions in
this file, use ctf_add_type(), in a later commit, to copy appropriate
types into a newly ctf_create()d, writable container.
The lowest-level opening functions are in here: ctf_bufopen(), which
takes ctf_sect_t structures akin to ELF section headers, and
ctf_simple_open(), which can be used if you don't have an entire ELF
section header to work from. Both will malloc() new space for the
buffers only if necessary, will mmap() directly from the file if
requested, and will mprotect() it afterwards to prevent accidental
corruption of the types. These functions are also used by ctf_update()
when converting types in a writable container into read-only types that
can be looked up using the lookup functions (in later commits).
The files are always of the native endianness of the system that created
them: at read time, the endianness of the header magic number is used to
determine whether or not the file needs byte-swapping, and the entire
thing is aggressively byte-swapped.
The agggressive nature of this swapping avoids complicating the rest of
the code with endianness conversions, while the native endianness
introduces no byte-swapping overhead in the common case. (The
endianness-independence code is also much newer than everything else in
this file, and deserves closer scrutiny.)
The accessors at the top of the file are there to transparently support
older versions of the CTF file format, allowing translation from older
formats that have different sizes for the structures in ctf.h:
currently, these older formats are intermingled with the newer ones in
ctf.h: they will probably migrate to a compatibility header in time, to
ease readability. The ctf_set_base() function is split out for the same
reason: when conversion code to a newer format is written, it would need
to malloc() new storage for the entire ctf_file_t if a file format
change causes it to grow, and for that we need ctf_set_base() to be a
separate function.
One pair of linked data structures supported by this file has no
creation code in libctf yet: the data and function object sections read
by init_symtab(). These will probably arrive soon, when the linker comes
to need them. (init_symtab() has hardly been changed since 2009, but if
any code in libctf has rotted over time, this will.)
A few simple accessors are also present that can even be called on
read-only containers because they don't actually modify them, since the
relevant things are not stored in the container but merely change its
operation: ctf_setmodel(), which lets you specify whether a container is
LP64 or not (used to statically determine the sizes of a few types),
ctf_import(), which is the only way to associate a parent container with
a child container, and ctf_setspecific(), which lets the caller
associate an arbitrary pointer with the CTF container for any use. If
the user doesn't call these functions correctly, libctf will misbehave:
this is particularly important for ctf_import(), since a container built
against a given parent container will not be able to resolve types that
depend on types in the parent unless it is ctf_import()ed with a parent
container with the same set of types at the same IDs, or a superset.
Possible future extensions (also noted in the ctf-hash.c file) include
storing a count of things so that we don't need to do one pass over the
CTF file counting everything, and computing a perfect hash at CTF
creation time in some compact form, storing it in the CTF file, and
using it to hash things so we don't need to do a second pass over the
entire CTF file to set up the hashes used to go from names to type IDs.
(There are multiple such hashes, one for each C type namespace: types,
enums, structs, and unions.)
libctf/
* ctf-open.c: New file.
* swap.h: Likewise.
include/
* ctf-api.h (ctf_file_close): New declaration.
(ctf_getdatasect): Likewise.
(ctf_parent_file): Likewise.
(ctf_parent_name): Likewise.
(ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise.
(ctf_import): Likewise.
(ctf_setmodel): Likewise.
(ctf_getmodel): Likewise.
(ctf_setspecific): Likewise.
(ctf_getspecific): Likewise.
The CTF creation process looks roughly like (error handling elided):
int err;
ctf_file_t *foo = ctf_create (&err);
ctf_id_t type = ctf_add_THING (foo, ...);
ctf_update (foo);
ctf_*write (...);
Some ctf_add_THING functions accept other type IDs as arguments,
depending on the type: cv-quals, pointers, and structure and union
members all take other types as arguments. So do 'slices', which
let you take an existing integral type and recast it as a type
with a different bitness or offset within a byte, for bitfields.
One class of THING is not a type: "variables", which are mappings
of names (in the internal string table) to types. These are mostly
useful when encoding variables that do not appear in a symbol table
but which some external user has some other way to figure out the
address of at runtime (dynamic symbol lookup or querying a VM
interpreter or something).
You can snapshot the creation process at any point: rolling back to a
snapshot deletes all types and variables added since that point.
You can make arbitrary type queries on the CTF container during the
creation process, but you must call ctf_update() first, which
translates the growing dynamic container into a static one (this uses
the CTF opening machinery, added in a later commit), which is quite
expensive. This function must also be called after adding types
and before writing the container out.
Because addition of types involves looking up existing types, we add a
little of the type lookup machinery here, as well: only enough to
look up types in dynamic containers under construction.
libctf/
* ctf-create.c: New file.
* ctf-lookup.c: New file.
include/
* ctf-api.h (zlib.h): New include.
(ctf_sect_t): New.
(ctf_sect_names_t): Likewise.
(ctf_encoding_t): Likewise.
(ctf_membinfo_t): Likewise.
(ctf_arinfo_t): Likewise.
(ctf_funcinfo_t): Likewise.
(ctf_lblinfo_t): Likewise.
(ctf_snapshot_id_t): Likewise.
(CTF_FUNC_VARARG): Likewise.
(ctf_simple_open): Likewise.
(ctf_bufopen): Likewise.
(ctf_create): Likewise.
(ctf_add_array): Likewise.
(ctf_add_const): Likewise.
(ctf_add_enum_encoded): Likewise.
(ctf_add_enum): Likewise.
(ctf_add_float): Likewise.
(ctf_add_forward): Likewise.
(ctf_add_function): Likewise.
(ctf_add_integer): Likewise.
(ctf_add_slice): Likewise.
(ctf_add_pointer): Likewise.
(ctf_add_type): Likewise.
(ctf_add_typedef): Likewise.
(ctf_add_restrict): Likewise.
(ctf_add_struct): Likewise.
(ctf_add_union): Likewise.
(ctf_add_struct_sized): Likewise.
(ctf_add_union_sized): Likewise.
(ctf_add_volatile): Likewise.
(ctf_add_enumerator): Likewise.
(ctf_add_member): Likewise.
(ctf_add_member_offset): Likewise.
(ctf_add_member_encoded): Likewise.
(ctf_add_variable): Likewise.
(ctf_set_array): Likewise.
(ctf_update): Likewise.
(ctf_snapshot): Likewise.
(ctf_rollback): Likewise.
(ctf_discard): Likewise.
(ctf_write): Likewise.
(ctf_gzwrite): Likewise.
(ctf_compress_write): Likewise.
We now enter a series of commits that are sufficiently tangled that
avoiding forward definitions is almost impossible: no attempt is made to
make individual commits compilable (which is why the build system does
not reference any of them yet): the only important thing is that they
should form something like conceptual groups.
But first, some definitions, including the core ctf_file_t itself. Uses
of these definitions will be introduced in later commits.
libctf/
* ctf-impl.h: New definitions and declarations for type creation
and lookup.
libctf maintains two distinct hash ADTs, one (ctf_dynhash) for wrapping
dynamically-generated unknown-sized hashes during CTF file construction,
one (ctf_hash) for wrapping unchanging hashes whose size is known at
creation time for reading CTF files that were previously created.
In the binutils implementation, these are both fairly thin wrappers
around libiberty hashtab.
Unusually, this code is not kept synchronized with libdtrace-ctf,
due to its dependence on libiberty hashtab.
libctf/
* ctf-hash.c: New file.
* ctf-impl.h: New declarations.
CTF functions return zero on success or an extended errno value which
can be translated into a string via the functions in this commit.
The errno numbers start at -CTF_BASE.
libctf/
* ctf-error.c: New file.
include/
* ctf-api.h (ctf_errno): New declaration.
(ctf_errmsg): Likewise.
These utilities are a bit of a ragbag of small things needed by more
than one TU: list manipulation, ELF32->64 translators, routines to look
up strings in string tables, dynamically-allocated string appenders, and
routines to set the specialized errno values previously committed in
<ctf-api.h>.
We do still need to dig around in raw ELF symbol tables in places,
because libctf allows the caller to pass in the contents of string and
symbol sections without telling it where they come from, so we cannot
use BFD to get the symbols (BFD reasonably demands the entire file). So
extract minimal ELF definitions from glibc into a private header named
libctf/elf.h: later, we use those to get symbols. (The start-of-
copyright range on elf.h reflects this glibc heritage.)
libctf/
* ctf-util.c: New file.
* elf.h: Likewise.
* ctf-impl.h: Include it, and add declarations.
The memory-allocation wrappers are simple things to allow malloc
interposition: they are only used inconsistently at present, usually
where malloc debugging was required in the past.
These provide a default implementation that is environment-variable
triggered (initialized on the first call to the libctf creation and
file-opening functions, the first functions people will use), and
a ctf_setdebug()/ctf_getdebug() pair that allows the caller to
explicitly turn debugging off and on. If ctf_setdebug() is called,
the automatic setting from an environment variable is skipped.
libctf/
* ctf-impl.h: New file.
* ctf-subr.c: New file.
include/
* ctf-api.h (ctf_setdebug): New.
(ctf_getdebug): Likewise.
This non-installed header is the means by which libctf consumers
communicate with libctf.
This header will be extended in subsequent commits.
include/
* ctf-api.h: New file.
The data structures and macros in this header can be used, if desired,
to access or create CTF files directly, without going through libctf,
though this should rarely be necessary in practice.
libctf relies on this header as its description of the CTF file format.
include/
* ctf.h: New file.
PR 24596
* emultempl/pe.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Check that
the output is coff before accessing coff tdata.
* emultempl/pep.em (gld_${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Likewise.
Force sysv hash style for reliable symbol table layout.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-now.d: Use --hash-style=sysv.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-shared.d: Likewise.
Calls to error () can cause SIGTTOU to send gdb to the background.
For example, on an Arm build:
(gdb) b main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x10774: file /build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/watchpoint.c, line 174.
(gdb) r
Starting program: /build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
[1]+ Stopped ../gdb ./outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
localhost$ fg
../gdb ./outputs/gdb.base/watchpoint/watchpoint
Cannot parse expression `.L1199 4@r4'.
warning: Probes-based dynamic linker interface failed.
Reverting to original interface.
The SIGTTOU is raised whilst inside a syscall during the call to tcdrain.
Fix is to use scoped_ignore_sigttou to ensure SIGTTOU is blocked.
In addition fix include comments - job_control is not included via terminal.h
gdb/ChangeLog:
* event-top.c: Remove include comment.
* inflow.c (class scoped_ignore_sigttou): Move from here...
* inflow.h (class scoped_ignore_sigttou): ...to here.
* ser-unix.c (hardwire_drain_output): Block SIGTTOU during drain.
* top.c: Remove include comment.
A plugin can change the element, so call the generic
bfd_link_add_symbols.
PR 24596
* cofflink.c (coff_link_check_archive_element): Don't assume
element is a coff object file after calling add_archive_element.
This patch cures a linker segfault, and "FAIL: Build pr22263-1".
PR 24596
* elf64-alpha.c (elf64_alpha_relocate_section): Don't attempt
to emit R_ALPHA_GOTTPREL in PIEs, for which no space is
allocated in alpha_dynamic_entries_for_reloc.
This doesn't fix the underlying bug, but an abort is better than a
segfault.
PR 24596
* elf32-m68k.c (elf_m68k_get_got_entry): Don't create a new
entry when MUST_FIND. Abort when MUST_FIND not found.
(elf_m68k_get_bfd2got_entry): Likewise.
(elf_m68k_relocate_section): Remove now useless assert.
One of the ld tests produces:
failed with: <Segmentation fault>, no expected output
FAIL: Discarded dynamic relocation section
This patch cures the segv. (The test still fails with ld producing
a really messed up output, DT_RELA at address 0!)
PR 24596
* elf64-hppa.c (elf64_hppa_finalize_dynreloc): Get the output bfd
from bfd_link_info, not an output section owner.
(elf64_hppa_finish_dynamic_symbol, elf64_hppa_finalize_opd): Likewise.
(elf_hppa_final_link_relocate): Likewise.
See also the FIXME. tic30-aout linker support is so bad (and has been
that way since the initial tic30-aout commit) that I'm obsoleting the
target. This patch fixes numerous linker testsuite segmentation faults.
PR 24596
* aout-tic30.c (MY_bfd_final_link): Don't segfault on missing
create_object_symbols_section, obj_textsec, obj_datasec or
obj_bsssec. Fix other errors in placement.
* config.bfd: Obsolete tic30-aout.
The XCOFF linker temporarily trims the output bfd section list,
without adjusting section_count to suit. This is a little rude, but
the dwarf line number code can easily cope with this situation. So
check for a NULL end of list as well as limiting the saved section
VMAs to the first section_count list entries.
Also fixes
-FAIL: Weak test 3 (main, static) (32-bit)
-FAIL: Weak test 3 (main, static) (64-bit)
PR 24596
* dwarf2.c (save_section_vma, section_vma_same): Check for NULL
end of section list as well as section_count.
* xcofflink.c (xcoff_link_add_symbols): Fix temporarily changed
section list before returning error.
Targets that lack ppc64 support were failing the new prefix-reloc
test. This patch adds some test infrastructure to deal with that, and
changes the powerpc gas usage info so that "-a64" is omitted when
unsupported.
I've been meaning to break up the usage message for a long time;
While doing so causes translators some work now, it should make it
easier next time a new powerpc option is added.
* config/tc-ppc.c (is_ppc64_target): New function.
(md_show_usage): Split up usage message. Don't show -a64 when
unsupported.
testsuite/gas/ppc/ppc.exp (supports_ppc64): New.
(prefix-reloc): Only run for ppc64.
I noticed that one of the readelf errors stopped processing of further
group sections. This patch makes readelf continue on to other groups,
like it does with the other errors.
* readelf.c (process_section_groups): Continue processing groups
when sh_entsize exceeds group size.
After fixing the ld-elf/pr22836-1a segmentation fault we run into an
assertion failure due to the generic ELF target not removing empty
SHT_GROUP sections. Avoid that.
* elf.c (bfd_elf_set_group_contents): Exit on zero size section.
Even though the generic ELF target doesn't handle groups correctly,
this helps avoid a segfault in bfd_elf_set_group_contents seen on
d30v-elf, dlx-elf, pj-elf, and xgate-elf when linking the pr22836
testcase.
PR 24596
bfd/
* linker.c (_bfd_generic_link_output_symbols): Heed BSF_KEEP.
ld/
* emultempl/genelf.em (gld${EMULATION_NAME}_after_open): Set
BFS_KEEP on group signature symbol.
Propagate STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS st_other attribute to the output and
add DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS dynamic tag if necessary.
Mismatching attributes are not diagnosed.
bfd/ChangeLog:
* elfnn-aarch64.c (elfNN_aarch64_merge_symbol_attribute): New function.
(struct elf_aarch64_link_hash_table): Add variant_pcs member.
(elfNN_aarch64_allocate_dynrelocs): Update variant_pcs.
(elfNN_aarch64_size_dynamic_sections): Add DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
(elf_backend_merge_symbol_attribute): Define.
ld/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/aarch64-elf.exp: Add new tests.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-1.s: New asm for tests.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-2.s: New asm for tests.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-now.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-r.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs-shared.d: New test.
* testsuite/ld-aarch64/variant_pcs.ld: New linker script for tests.
Allow st_other values such as STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS to be set for alias
symbols independently. This is needed for ifunc symbols which are
aliased to the resolver using .set and don't expect resolver attributes
to override the ifunc symbol attributes. This means .variant_pcs must be
added explicitly to aliases.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (aarch64_elf_copy_symbol_attributes): Define.
* config/tc-aarch64.h (aarch64_elf_copy_symbol_attributes): Declare.
(OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES): Define.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-3.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-3.s: New test.
In ELF objects the specified symbol is marked with STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
gas/ChangeLog:
* config/tc-aarch64.c (s_variant_pcs): New function.
* doc/c-aarch64.texi: Document .variant_pcs.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-1.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-1.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-2.d: New test.
* testsuite/gas/aarch64/symbol-variant_pcs-2.s: New test.
The bottom 2 bits of st_other are used for visibility, the top 6 bits are
de facto reserved for processor specific use. This patch defines a
bits to mark function symbols that follow a variant procedure call standard
with different register usage convention.
A dynamic tag is also defined that marks modules with R_<CLS>_JUMP_SLOT
relocations referencing symbols marked with STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
This can be used by dynamic linkers that support lazy binding to decide
what registers need to be preserved during symbol resolution.
binutils/ChangeLog:
* readelf.c (get_aarch64_dynamic_type): Handle DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
(get_aarch64_symbol_other): New, handles STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
(get_symbol_other): Call get_aarch64_symbol_other.
include/ChangeLog:
* elf/aarch64.h (DT_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS): Define.
(STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS): Define.
Add a test-case gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index.exp to test
gdb/contrib/gdb-add-index.sh.
Tested with x86_64-linux.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
2019-05-24 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
* gdb.dwarf2/gdb-add-index.exp: New file.
bfd/
* elf64-ppc.c (ppc64_elf_check_relocs): Set has_gotrel for
R_PPC64_GOT_PCREL34.
(xlate_pcrel_opt): New function.
(ppc64_elf_edit_toc): Handle R_PPC64_GOT_PCREL34.
(ppc64_elf_relocate_section): Edit GOT indirect to GOT relative
for R_PPC64_GOT_PCREL34. Implement R_PPC64_PCREL_OPT optimisation.
ld/
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pcrelopt.s,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pcrelopt.d,
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/pcrelopt.sec: New test.
* testsuite/ld-powerpc/powerpc.exp: Run it.
This patch adds initial 64-bit insn assembler/disassembler support.
The only instruction added is "pnop" along with the automatic aligning
of prefix instruction so they do not cross 64-byte boundaries.
include/
* dis-asm.h (WIDE_OUTPUT): Define.
* opcode/ppc.h (prefix_opcodes, prefix_num_opcodes): Declare.
(PPC_OPCODE_POWERXX, PPC_GET_PREFIX, PPC_GET_SUFFIX),
(PPC_PREFIX_P, PPC_PREFIX_SEG): Define.
opcodes/
* ppc-dis.c (ppc_opts): Add "future" entry.
(PREFIX_OPCD_SEGS): Define.
(prefix_opcd_indices): New array.
(disassemble_init_powerpc): Initialize prefix_opcd_indices.
(lookup_prefix): New function.
(print_insn_powerpc): Handle 64-bit prefix instructions.
* ppc-opc.c (PREFIX_OP, PREFIX_FORM, SUFFIX_MASK, PREFIX_MASK),
(PMRR, POWERXX): Define.
(prefix_opcodes): New instruction table.
(prefix_num_opcodes): New constant.
binutils/
* objdump.c (disassemble_bytes): Set WIDE_OUTPUT in flags.
gas/
* config/tc-ppc.c (ppc_setup_opcodes): Handle prefix_opcodes.
(struct insn_label_list): New.
(insn_labels, free_insn_labels): New variables.
(ppc_record_label, ppc_clear_labels, ppc_start_line_hook): New funcs.
(ppc_frob_label, ppc_new_dot_label): Move functions earlier in file
and call ppc_record_label.
(md_assemble): Handle 64-bit prefix instructions. Align labels
that are on the same line as a prefix instruction.
* config/tc-ppc.h (tc_frob_label, ppc_frob_label): Move to
later in the file.
(md_start_line_hook): Define.
(ppc_start_line_hook): Declare.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/prefix-align.d,
* testsuite/gas/ppc/prefix-align.s: New test.
* testsuite/gas/ppc/ppc.exp: Run new test.
This patch avoids for bpf_elf64_le_vec to be referenced in targmatch.h
when building a BFD without BFD64, resulting in an undefined symbol.
This was a regression introduced along with the BPF target.
bfd/ChangeLog:
2019-05-23 Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>
* config.bfd (targ_cpu): Process bpf-*-none only if BFD64.
* configure.ac: Set target_size=64 for bpf_elf64_le_vec and
bpf_elf64_be_vec.
* configure: Regenerate.
This patch adds support for ELF64 eBPF to readelf, and fixes a `nm'
test to run properly in bpf-*-* targets.
binutils/ChangeLog:
2019-05-23 Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>
* readelf.c: Include elf/bpf.h.
(guess_is_rela): Hanle EM_BPF.
(dump_relocations): Likewise.
(is_32bit_abs_reloc): Likewise.
* testsuite/binutils-all/nm.exp: Add bpf-*-* to the list of
ELF targets.
This patch adds support to the linker for the Linux eBPF architecture.
A minimal testsuite is included.
ld/ChangeLog:
2019-05-23 Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>
* Makefile.am (ALL_64_EMULATION_SOURCES): Add eelf64bpf.c.
* Makefile.in (prefix): Regenerate.
* configure.tgt (targ_extra_ofiles): Add case for bpf-*-* targets.
* emulparams/elf64bpf.sh: New file.
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp (check_gc_sections_available): Add
bpf-*-* to the list of targets not supporting gc-sections.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/bar.s: New file.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/jump-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/foo.s: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/call-1.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/bpf.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-bpf/baz.s: Likewise.