//===- Writer.cpp ---------------------------------------------------------===// // // The LLVM Linker // // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #include "Writer.h" #include "AArch64ErrataFix.h" #include "CallGraphSort.h" #include "Config.h" #include "Filesystem.h" #include "LinkerScript.h" #include "MapFile.h" #include "OutputSections.h" #include "Relocations.h" #include "SymbolTable.h" #include "Symbols.h" #include "SyntheticSections.h" #include "Target.h" #include "lld/Common/Memory.h" #include "lld/Common/Strings.h" #include "lld/Common/Threads.h" #include "llvm/ADT/StringMap.h" #include "llvm/ADT/StringSwitch.h" #include using namespace llvm; using namespace llvm::ELF; using namespace llvm::object; using namespace llvm::support; using namespace llvm::support::endian; using namespace lld; using namespace lld::elf; namespace { // The writer writes a SymbolTable result to a file. template class Writer { public: Writer() : Buffer(errorHandler().OutputBuffer) {} typedef typename ELFT::Shdr Elf_Shdr; typedef typename ELFT::Ehdr Elf_Ehdr; typedef typename ELFT::Phdr Elf_Phdr; void run(); private: void copyLocalSymbols(); void addSectionSymbols(); void forEachRelSec(llvm::function_ref Fn); void sortSections(); void resolveShfLinkOrder(); void maybeAddThunks(); void sortInputSections(); void finalizeSections(); void checkExecuteOnly(); void setReservedSymbolSections(); std::vector createPhdrs(); void removeEmptyPTLoad(); void addPtArmExid(std::vector &Phdrs); void assignFileOffsets(); void assignFileOffsetsBinary(); void setPhdrs(); void checkSections(); void fixSectionAlignments(); void openFile(); void writeTrapInstr(); void writeHeader(); void writeSections(); void writeSectionsBinary(); void writeBuildId(); std::unique_ptr &Buffer; void addRelIpltSymbols(); void addStartEndSymbols(); void addStartStopSymbols(OutputSection *Sec); std::vector Phdrs; uint64_t FileSize; uint64_t SectionHeaderOff; }; } // anonymous namespace static bool isSectionPrefix(StringRef Prefix, StringRef Name) { return Name.startswith(Prefix) || Name == Prefix.drop_back(); } StringRef elf::getOutputSectionName(const InputSectionBase *S) { if (Config->Relocatable) return S->Name; // This is for --emit-relocs. If .text.foo is emitted as .text.bar, we want // to emit .rela.text.foo as .rela.text.bar for consistency (this is not // technically required, but not doing it is odd). This code guarantees that. if (auto *IS = dyn_cast(S)) { if (InputSectionBase *Rel = IS->getRelocatedSection()) { OutputSection *Out = Rel->getOutputSection(); if (S->Type == SHT_RELA) return Saver.save(".rela" + Out->Name); return Saver.save(".rel" + Out->Name); } } // This check is for -z keep-text-section-prefix. This option separates text // sections with prefix ".text.hot", ".text.unlikely", ".text.startup" or // ".text.exit". // When enabled, this allows identifying the hot code region (.text.hot) in // the final binary which can be selectively mapped to huge pages or mlocked, // for instance. if (Config->ZKeepTextSectionPrefix) for (StringRef V : {".text.hot.", ".text.unlikely.", ".text.startup.", ".text.exit."}) if (isSectionPrefix(V, S->Name)) return V.drop_back(); for (StringRef V : {".text.", ".rodata.", ".data.rel.ro.", ".data.", ".bss.rel.ro.", ".bss.", ".init_array.", ".fini_array.", ".ctors.", ".dtors.", ".tbss.", ".gcc_except_table.", ".tdata.", ".ARM.exidx.", ".ARM.extab."}) if (isSectionPrefix(V, S->Name)) return V.drop_back(); // CommonSection is identified as "COMMON" in linker scripts. // By default, it should go to .bss section. if (S->Name == "COMMON") return ".bss"; return S->Name; } static bool needsInterpSection() { return !SharedFiles.empty() && !Config->DynamicLinker.empty() && Script->needsInterpSection(); } template void elf::writeResult() { Writer().run(); } template void Writer::removeEmptyPTLoad() { llvm::erase_if(Phdrs, [&](const PhdrEntry *P) { if (P->p_type != PT_LOAD) return false; if (!P->FirstSec) return true; uint64_t Size = P->LastSec->Addr + P->LastSec->Size - P->FirstSec->Addr; return Size == 0; }); } template static void combineEhFrameSections() { for (InputSectionBase *&S : InputSections) { EhInputSection *ES = dyn_cast(S); if (!ES || !ES->Live) continue; In.EhFrame->addSection(ES); S = nullptr; } std::vector &V = InputSections; V.erase(std::remove(V.begin(), V.end(), nullptr), V.end()); } static Defined *addOptionalRegular(StringRef Name, SectionBase *Sec, uint64_t Val, uint8_t StOther = STV_HIDDEN, uint8_t Binding = STB_GLOBAL) { Symbol *S = Symtab->find(Name); if (!S || S->isDefined()) return nullptr; return Symtab->addDefined(Name, StOther, STT_NOTYPE, Val, /*Size=*/0, Binding, Sec, /*File=*/nullptr); } static Defined *addAbsolute(StringRef Name) { return Symtab->addDefined(Name, STV_HIDDEN, STT_NOTYPE, 0, 0, STB_GLOBAL, nullptr, nullptr); } // The linker is expected to define some symbols depending on // the linking result. This function defines such symbols. void elf::addReservedSymbols() { if (Config->EMachine == EM_MIPS) { // Define _gp for MIPS. st_value of _gp symbol will be updated by Writer // so that it points to an absolute address which by default is relative // to GOT. Default offset is 0x7ff0. // See "Global Data Symbols" in Chapter 6 in the following document: // ftp://www.linux-mips.org/pub/linux/mips/doc/ABI/mipsabi.pdf ElfSym::MipsGp = addAbsolute("_gp"); // On MIPS O32 ABI, _gp_disp is a magic symbol designates offset between // start of function and 'gp' pointer into GOT. if (Symtab->find("_gp_disp")) ElfSym::MipsGpDisp = addAbsolute("_gp_disp"); // The __gnu_local_gp is a magic symbol equal to the current value of 'gp' // pointer. This symbol is used in the code generated by .cpload pseudo-op // in case of using -mno-shared option. // https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2004-12/msg00094.html if (Symtab->find("__gnu_local_gp")) ElfSym::MipsLocalGp = addAbsolute("__gnu_local_gp"); } // The Power Architecture 64-bit v2 ABI defines a TableOfContents (TOC) which // combines the typical ELF GOT with the small data sections. It commonly // includes .got .toc .sdata .sbss. The .TOC. symbol replaces both // _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ and _SDA_BASE_ from the 32-bit ABI. It is used to // represent the TOC base which is offset by 0x8000 bytes from the start of // the .got section. // We do not allow _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ to be defined by input objects as the // correctness of some relocations depends on its value. StringRef GotTableSymName = (Config->EMachine == EM_PPC64) ? ".TOC." : "_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_"; if (Symbol *S = Symtab->find(GotTableSymName)) { if (S->isDefined()) error(toString(S->File) + " cannot redefine linker defined symbol '" + GotTableSymName + "'"); else ElfSym::GlobalOffsetTable = Symtab->addDefined( GotTableSymName, STV_HIDDEN, STT_NOTYPE, Target->GotBaseSymOff, /*Size=*/0, STB_GLOBAL, Out::ElfHeader, /*File=*/nullptr); } // __ehdr_start is the location of ELF file headers. Note that we define // this symbol unconditionally even when using a linker script, which // differs from the behavior implemented by GNU linker which only define // this symbol if ELF headers are in the memory mapped segment. addOptionalRegular("__ehdr_start", Out::ElfHeader, 0, STV_HIDDEN); // __executable_start is not documented, but the expectation of at // least the Android libc is that it points to the ELF header. addOptionalRegular("__executable_start", Out::ElfHeader, 0, STV_HIDDEN); // __dso_handle symbol is passed to cxa_finalize as a marker to identify // each DSO. The address of the symbol doesn't matter as long as they are // different in different DSOs, so we chose the start address of the DSO. addOptionalRegular("__dso_handle", Out::ElfHeader, 0, STV_HIDDEN); // If linker script do layout we do not need to create any standart symbols. if (Script->HasSectionsCommand) return; auto Add = [](StringRef S, int64_t Pos) { return addOptionalRegular(S, Out::ElfHeader, Pos, STV_DEFAULT); }; ElfSym::Bss = Add("__bss_start", 0); ElfSym::End1 = Add("end", -1); ElfSym::End2 = Add("_end", -1); ElfSym::Etext1 = Add("etext", -1); ElfSym::Etext2 = Add("_etext", -1); ElfSym::Edata1 = Add("edata", -1); ElfSym::Edata2 = Add("_edata", -1); } static OutputSection *findSection(StringRef Name) { for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base)) if (Sec->Name == Name) return Sec; return nullptr; } // Initialize Out members. template static void createSyntheticSections() { // Initialize all pointers with NULL. This is needed because // you can call lld::elf::main more than once as a library. memset(&Out::First, 0, sizeof(Out)); auto Add = [](InputSectionBase *Sec) { InputSections.push_back(Sec); }; In.DynStrTab = make(".dynstr", true); In.Dynamic = make>(); if (Config->AndroidPackDynRelocs) { In.RelaDyn = make>( Config->IsRela ? ".rela.dyn" : ".rel.dyn"); } else { In.RelaDyn = make>( Config->IsRela ? ".rela.dyn" : ".rel.dyn", Config->ZCombreloc); } In.ShStrTab = make(".shstrtab", false); Out::ProgramHeaders = make("", 0, SHF_ALLOC); Out::ProgramHeaders->Alignment = Config->Wordsize; if (needsInterpSection()) { In.Interp = createInterpSection(); Add(In.Interp); } if (Config->Strip != StripPolicy::All) { In.StrTab = make(".strtab", false); In.SymTab = make>(*In.StrTab); In.SymTabShndx = make(); } if (Config->BuildId != BuildIdKind::None) { In.BuildId = make(); Add(In.BuildId); } In.Bss = make(".bss", 0, 1); Add(In.Bss); // If there is a SECTIONS command and a .data.rel.ro section name use name // .data.rel.ro.bss so that we match in the .data.rel.ro output section. // This makes sure our relro is contiguous. bool HasDataRelRo = Script->HasSectionsCommand && findSection(".data.rel.ro"); In.BssRelRo = make(HasDataRelRo ? ".data.rel.ro.bss" : ".bss.rel.ro", 0, 1); Add(In.BssRelRo); // Add MIPS-specific sections. if (Config->EMachine == EM_MIPS) { if (!Config->Shared && Config->HasDynSymTab) { In.MipsRldMap = make(); Add(In.MipsRldMap); } if (auto *Sec = MipsAbiFlagsSection::create()) Add(Sec); if (auto *Sec = MipsOptionsSection::create()) Add(Sec); if (auto *Sec = MipsReginfoSection::create()) Add(Sec); } if (Config->HasDynSymTab) { In.DynSymTab = make>(*In.DynStrTab); Add(In.DynSymTab); InX::VerSym = make>(); Add(InX::VerSym); if (!Config->VersionDefinitions.empty()) { In.VerDef = make(); Add(In.VerDef); } InX::VerNeed = make>(); Add(InX::VerNeed); if (Config->GnuHash) { In.GnuHashTab = make(); Add(In.GnuHashTab); } if (Config->SysvHash) { In.HashTab = make(); Add(In.HashTab); } Add(In.Dynamic); Add(In.DynStrTab); Add(In.RelaDyn); } if (Config->RelrPackDynRelocs) { In.RelrDyn = make>(); Add(In.RelrDyn); } // Add .got. MIPS' .got is so different from the other archs, // it has its own class. if (Config->EMachine == EM_MIPS) { In.MipsGot = make(); Add(In.MipsGot); } else { In.Got = make(); Add(In.Got); } if (Config->EMachine == EM_PPC64) { In.PPC64LongBranchTarget = make(); Add(In.PPC64LongBranchTarget); } In.GotPlt = make(); Add(In.GotPlt); In.IgotPlt = make(); Add(In.IgotPlt); if (Config->GdbIndex) { In.GdbIndex = GdbIndexSection::create(); Add(In.GdbIndex); } // We always need to add rel[a].plt to output if it has entries. // Even for static linking it can contain R_[*]_IRELATIVE relocations. In.RelaPlt = make>( Config->IsRela ? ".rela.plt" : ".rel.plt", false /*Sort*/); Add(In.RelaPlt); // The RelaIplt immediately follows .rel.plt (.rel.dyn for ARM) to ensure // that the IRelative relocations are processed last by the dynamic loader. // We cannot place the iplt section in .rel.dyn when Android relocation // packing is enabled because that would cause a section type mismatch. // However, because the Android dynamic loader reads .rel.plt after .rel.dyn, // we can get the desired behaviour by placing the iplt section in .rel.plt. In.RelaIplt = make>( (Config->EMachine == EM_ARM && !Config->AndroidPackDynRelocs) ? ".rel.dyn" : In.RelaPlt->Name, false /*Sort*/); Add(In.RelaIplt); In.Plt = make(false); Add(In.Plt); In.Iplt = make(true); Add(In.Iplt); // .note.GNU-stack is always added when we are creating a re-linkable // object file. Other linkers are using the presence of this marker // section to control the executable-ness of the stack area, but that // is irrelevant these days. Stack area should always be non-executable // by default. So we emit this section unconditionally. if (Config->Relocatable) Add(make()); if (!Config->Relocatable) { if (Config->EhFrameHdr) { In.EhFrameHdr = make(); Add(In.EhFrameHdr); } In.EhFrame = make(); Add(In.EhFrame); } if (In.SymTab) Add(In.SymTab); if (In.SymTabShndx) Add(In.SymTabShndx); Add(In.ShStrTab); if (In.StrTab) Add(In.StrTab); if (Config->EMachine == EM_ARM && !Config->Relocatable) // Add a sentinel to terminate .ARM.exidx. It helps an unwinder // to find the exact address range of the last entry. Add(make()); } // The main function of the writer. template void Writer::run() { // Create linker-synthesized sections such as .got or .plt. // Such sections are of type input section. createSyntheticSections(); if (!Config->Relocatable) combineEhFrameSections(); // We want to process linker script commands. When SECTIONS command // is given we let it create sections. Script->processSectionCommands(); // Linker scripts controls how input sections are assigned to output sections. // Input sections that were not handled by scripts are called "orphans", and // they are assigned to output sections by the default rule. Process that. Script->addOrphanSections(); if (Config->Discard != DiscardPolicy::All) copyLocalSymbols(); if (Config->CopyRelocs) addSectionSymbols(); // Now that we have a complete set of output sections. This function // completes section contents. For example, we need to add strings // to the string table, and add entries to .got and .plt. // finalizeSections does that. finalizeSections(); checkExecuteOnly(); if (errorCount()) return; Script->assignAddresses(); // If -compressed-debug-sections is specified, we need to compress // .debug_* sections. Do it right now because it changes the size of // output sections. for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) Sec->maybeCompress(); Script->allocateHeaders(Phdrs); // Remove empty PT_LOAD to avoid causing the dynamic linker to try to mmap a // 0 sized region. This has to be done late since only after assignAddresses // we know the size of the sections. removeEmptyPTLoad(); if (!Config->OFormatBinary) assignFileOffsets(); else assignFileOffsetsBinary(); setPhdrs(); if (Config->Relocatable) for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) Sec->Addr = 0; if (Config->CheckSections) checkSections(); // It does not make sense try to open the file if we have error already. if (errorCount()) return; // Write the result down to a file. openFile(); if (errorCount()) return; if (!Config->OFormatBinary) { writeTrapInstr(); writeHeader(); writeSections(); } else { writeSectionsBinary(); } // Backfill .note.gnu.build-id section content. This is done at last // because the content is usually a hash value of the entire output file. writeBuildId(); if (errorCount()) return; // Handle -Map and -cref options. writeMapFile(); writeCrossReferenceTable(); if (errorCount()) return; if (auto E = Buffer->commit()) error("failed to write to the output file: " + toString(std::move(E))); } static bool shouldKeepInSymtab(SectionBase *Sec, StringRef SymName, const Symbol &B) { if (B.isSection()) return false; if (Config->Discard == DiscardPolicy::None) return true; // In ELF assembly .L symbols are normally discarded by the assembler. // If the assembler fails to do so, the linker discards them if // * --discard-locals is used. // * The symbol is in a SHF_MERGE section, which is normally the reason for // the assembler keeping the .L symbol. if (!SymName.startswith(".L") && !SymName.empty()) return true; if (Config->Discard == DiscardPolicy::Locals) return false; return !Sec || !(Sec->Flags & SHF_MERGE); } static bool includeInSymtab(const Symbol &B) { if (!B.isLocal() && !B.IsUsedInRegularObj) return false; if (auto *D = dyn_cast(&B)) { // Always include absolute symbols. SectionBase *Sec = D->Section; if (!Sec) return true; Sec = Sec->Repl; // Exclude symbols pointing to garbage-collected sections. if (isa(Sec) && !Sec->Live) return false; if (auto *S = dyn_cast(Sec)) if (!S->getSectionPiece(D->Value)->Live) return false; return true; } return B.Used; } // Local symbols are not in the linker's symbol table. This function scans // each object file's symbol table to copy local symbols to the output. template void Writer::copyLocalSymbols() { if (!In.SymTab) return; for (InputFile *File : ObjectFiles) { ObjFile *F = cast>(File); for (Symbol *B : F->getLocalSymbols()) { if (!B->isLocal()) fatal(toString(F) + ": broken object: getLocalSymbols returns a non-local symbol"); auto *DR = dyn_cast(B); // No reason to keep local undefined symbol in symtab. if (!DR) continue; if (!includeInSymtab(*B)) continue; SectionBase *Sec = DR->Section; if (!shouldKeepInSymtab(Sec, B->getName(), *B)) continue; In.SymTab->addSymbol(B); } } } // Create a section symbol for each output section so that we can represent // relocations that point to the section. If we know that no relocation is // referring to a section (that happens if the section is a synthetic one), we // don't create a section symbol for that section. template void Writer::addSectionSymbols() { for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) { auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base); if (!Sec) continue; auto I = llvm::find_if(Sec->SectionCommands, [](BaseCommand *Base) { if (auto *ISD = dyn_cast(Base)) return !ISD->Sections.empty(); return false; }); if (I == Sec->SectionCommands.end()) continue; InputSection *IS = cast(*I)->Sections[0]; // Relocations are not using REL[A] section symbols. if (IS->Type == SHT_REL || IS->Type == SHT_RELA) continue; // Unlike other synthetic sections, mergeable output sections contain data // copied from input sections, and there may be a relocation pointing to its // contents if -r or -emit-reloc are given. if (isa(IS) && !(IS->Flags & SHF_MERGE)) continue; auto *Sym = make(IS->File, "", STB_LOCAL, /*StOther=*/0, STT_SECTION, /*Value=*/0, /*Size=*/0, IS); In.SymTab->addSymbol(Sym); } } // Today's loaders have a feature to make segments read-only after // processing dynamic relocations to enhance security. PT_GNU_RELRO // is defined for that. // // This function returns true if a section needs to be put into a // PT_GNU_RELRO segment. static bool isRelroSection(const OutputSection *Sec) { if (!Config->ZRelro) return false; uint64_t Flags = Sec->Flags; // Non-allocatable or non-writable sections don't need RELRO because // they are not writable or not even mapped to memory in the first place. // RELRO is for sections that are essentially read-only but need to // be writable only at process startup to allow dynamic linker to // apply relocations. if (!(Flags & SHF_ALLOC) || !(Flags & SHF_WRITE)) return false; // Once initialized, TLS data segments are used as data templates // for a thread-local storage. For each new thread, runtime // allocates memory for a TLS and copy templates there. No thread // are supposed to use templates directly. Thus, it can be in RELRO. if (Flags & SHF_TLS) return true; // .init_array, .preinit_array and .fini_array contain pointers to // functions that are executed on process startup or exit. These // pointers are set by the static linker, and they are not expected // to change at runtime. But if you are an attacker, you could do // interesting things by manipulating pointers in .fini_array, for // example. So they are put into RELRO. uint32_t Type = Sec->Type; if (Type == SHT_INIT_ARRAY || Type == SHT_FINI_ARRAY || Type == SHT_PREINIT_ARRAY) return true; // .got contains pointers to external symbols. They are resolved by // the dynamic linker when a module is loaded into memory, and after // that they are not expected to change. So, it can be in RELRO. if (In.Got && Sec == In.Got->getParent()) return true; // .toc is a GOT-ish section for PowerPC64. Their contents are accessed // through r2 register, which is reserved for that purpose. Since r2 is used // for accessing .got as well, .got and .toc need to be close enough in the // virtual address space. Usually, .toc comes just after .got. Since we place // .got into RELRO, .toc needs to be placed into RELRO too. if (Sec->Name.equals(".toc")) return true; // .got.plt contains pointers to external function symbols. They are // by default resolved lazily, so we usually cannot put it into RELRO. // However, if "-z now" is given, the lazy symbol resolution is // disabled, which enables us to put it into RELRO. if (Sec == In.GotPlt->getParent()) return Config->ZNow; // .dynamic section contains data for the dynamic linker, and // there's no need to write to it at runtime, so it's better to put // it into RELRO. if (Sec == In.Dynamic->getParent()) return true; // Sections with some special names are put into RELRO. This is a // bit unfortunate because section names shouldn't be significant in // ELF in spirit. But in reality many linker features depend on // magic section names. StringRef S = Sec->Name; return S == ".data.rel.ro" || S == ".bss.rel.ro" || S == ".ctors" || S == ".dtors" || S == ".jcr" || S == ".eh_frame" || S == ".openbsd.randomdata"; } // We compute a rank for each section. The rank indicates where the // section should be placed in the file. Instead of using simple // numbers (0,1,2...), we use a series of flags. One for each decision // point when placing the section. // Using flags has two key properties: // * It is easy to check if a give branch was taken. // * It is easy two see how similar two ranks are (see getRankProximity). enum RankFlags { RF_NOT_ADDR_SET = 1 << 18, RF_NOT_ALLOC = 1 << 17, RF_NOT_INTERP = 1 << 16, RF_NOT_NOTE = 1 << 15, RF_WRITE = 1 << 14, RF_EXEC_WRITE = 1 << 13, RF_EXEC = 1 << 12, RF_RODATA = 1 << 11, RF_NON_TLS_BSS = 1 << 10, RF_NON_TLS_BSS_RO = 1 << 9, RF_NOT_TLS = 1 << 8, RF_BSS = 1 << 7, RF_PPC_NOT_TOCBSS = 1 << 6, RF_PPC_TOCL = 1 << 5, RF_PPC_TOC = 1 << 4, RF_PPC_GOT = 1 << 3, RF_PPC_BRANCH_LT = 1 << 2, RF_MIPS_GPREL = 1 << 1, RF_MIPS_NOT_GOT = 1 << 0 }; static unsigned getSectionRank(const OutputSection *Sec) { unsigned Rank = 0; // We want to put section specified by -T option first, so we // can start assigning VA starting from them later. if (Config->SectionStartMap.count(Sec->Name)) return Rank; Rank |= RF_NOT_ADDR_SET; // Allocatable sections go first to reduce the total PT_LOAD size and // so debug info doesn't change addresses in actual code. if (!(Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC)) return Rank | RF_NOT_ALLOC; // Put .interp first because some loaders want to see that section // on the first page of the executable file when loaded into memory. if (Sec->Name == ".interp") return Rank; Rank |= RF_NOT_INTERP; // Put .note sections (which make up one PT_NOTE) at the beginning so that // they are likely to be included in a core file even if core file size is // limited. In particular, we want a .note.gnu.build-id and a .note.tag to be // included in a core to match core files with executables. if (Sec->Type == SHT_NOTE) return Rank; Rank |= RF_NOT_NOTE; // Sort sections based on their access permission in the following // order: R, RX, RWX, RW. This order is based on the following // considerations: // * Read-only sections come first such that they go in the // PT_LOAD covering the program headers at the start of the file. // * Read-only, executable sections come next. // * Writable, executable sections follow such that .plt on // architectures where it needs to be writable will be placed // between .text and .data. // * Writable sections come last, such that .bss lands at the very // end of the last PT_LOAD. bool IsExec = Sec->Flags & SHF_EXECINSTR; bool IsWrite = Sec->Flags & SHF_WRITE; if (IsExec) { if (IsWrite) Rank |= RF_EXEC_WRITE; else Rank |= RF_EXEC; } else if (IsWrite) { Rank |= RF_WRITE; } else if (Sec->Type == SHT_PROGBITS) { // Make non-executable and non-writable PROGBITS sections (e.g .rodata // .eh_frame) closer to .text. They likely contain PC or GOT relative // relocations and there could be relocation overflow if other huge sections // (.dynstr .dynsym) were placed in between. Rank |= RF_RODATA; } // If we got here we know that both A and B are in the same PT_LOAD. bool IsTls = Sec->Flags & SHF_TLS; bool IsNoBits = Sec->Type == SHT_NOBITS; // The first requirement we have is to put (non-TLS) nobits sections last. The // reason is that the only thing the dynamic linker will see about them is a // p_memsz that is larger than p_filesz. Seeing that it zeros the end of the // PT_LOAD, so that has to correspond to the nobits sections. bool IsNonTlsNoBits = IsNoBits && !IsTls; if (IsNonTlsNoBits) Rank |= RF_NON_TLS_BSS; // We place nobits RelRo sections before plain r/w ones, and non-nobits RelRo // sections after r/w ones, so that the RelRo sections are contiguous. bool IsRelRo = isRelroSection(Sec); if (IsNonTlsNoBits && !IsRelRo) Rank |= RF_NON_TLS_BSS_RO; if (!IsNonTlsNoBits && IsRelRo) Rank |= RF_NON_TLS_BSS_RO; // The TLS initialization block needs to be a single contiguous block in a R/W // PT_LOAD, so stick TLS sections directly before the other RelRo R/W // sections. The TLS NOBITS sections are placed here as they don't take up // virtual address space in the PT_LOAD. if (!IsTls) Rank |= RF_NOT_TLS; // Within the TLS initialization block, the non-nobits sections need to appear // first. if (IsNoBits) Rank |= RF_BSS; // Some architectures have additional ordering restrictions for sections // within the same PT_LOAD. if (Config->EMachine == EM_PPC64) { // PPC64 has a number of special SHT_PROGBITS+SHF_ALLOC+SHF_WRITE sections // that we would like to make sure appear is a specific order to maximize // their coverage by a single signed 16-bit offset from the TOC base // pointer. Conversely, the special .tocbss section should be first among // all SHT_NOBITS sections. This will put it next to the loaded special // PPC64 sections (and, thus, within reach of the TOC base pointer). StringRef Name = Sec->Name; if (Name != ".tocbss") Rank |= RF_PPC_NOT_TOCBSS; if (Name == ".toc1") Rank |= RF_PPC_TOCL; if (Name == ".toc") Rank |= RF_PPC_TOC; if (Name == ".got") Rank |= RF_PPC_GOT; if (Name == ".branch_lt") Rank |= RF_PPC_BRANCH_LT; } if (Config->EMachine == EM_MIPS) { // All sections with SHF_MIPS_GPREL flag should be grouped together // because data in these sections is addressable with a gp relative address. if (Sec->Flags & SHF_MIPS_GPREL) Rank |= RF_MIPS_GPREL; if (Sec->Name != ".got") Rank |= RF_MIPS_NOT_GOT; } return Rank; } static bool compareSections(const BaseCommand *ACmd, const BaseCommand *BCmd) { const OutputSection *A = cast(ACmd); const OutputSection *B = cast(BCmd); if (A->SortRank != B->SortRank) return A->SortRank < B->SortRank; if (!(A->SortRank & RF_NOT_ADDR_SET)) return Config->SectionStartMap.lookup(A->Name) < Config->SectionStartMap.lookup(B->Name); return false; } void PhdrEntry::add(OutputSection *Sec) { LastSec = Sec; if (!FirstSec) FirstSec = Sec; p_align = std::max(p_align, Sec->Alignment); if (p_type == PT_LOAD) Sec->PtLoad = this; } // The beginning and the ending of .rel[a].plt section are marked // with __rel[a]_iplt_{start,end} symbols if it is a statically linked // executable. The runtime needs these symbols in order to resolve // all IRELATIVE relocs on startup. For dynamic executables, we don't // need these symbols, since IRELATIVE relocs are resolved through GOT // and PLT. For details, see http://www.airs.com/blog/archives/403. template void Writer::addRelIpltSymbols() { if (Config->Relocatable || needsInterpSection()) return; // By default, __rela_iplt_{start,end} belong to a dummy section 0 // because .rela.plt might be empty and thus removed from output. // We'll override Out::ElfHeader with In.RelaIplt later when we are // sure that .rela.plt exists in output. ElfSym::RelaIpltStart = addOptionalRegular( Config->IsRela ? "__rela_iplt_start" : "__rel_iplt_start", Out::ElfHeader, 0, STV_HIDDEN, STB_WEAK); ElfSym::RelaIpltEnd = addOptionalRegular( Config->IsRela ? "__rela_iplt_end" : "__rel_iplt_end", Out::ElfHeader, 0, STV_HIDDEN, STB_WEAK); } template void Writer::forEachRelSec( llvm::function_ref Fn) { // Scan all relocations. Each relocation goes through a series // of tests to determine if it needs special treatment, such as // creating GOT, PLT, copy relocations, etc. // Note that relocations for non-alloc sections are directly // processed by InputSection::relocateNonAlloc. for (InputSectionBase *IS : InputSections) if (IS->Live && isa(IS) && (IS->Flags & SHF_ALLOC)) Fn(*IS); for (EhInputSection *ES : In.EhFrame->Sections) Fn(*ES); } // This function generates assignments for predefined symbols (e.g. _end or // _etext) and inserts them into the commands sequence to be processed at the // appropriate time. This ensures that the value is going to be correct by the // time any references to these symbols are processed and is equivalent to // defining these symbols explicitly in the linker script. template void Writer::setReservedSymbolSections() { if (ElfSym::GlobalOffsetTable) { // The _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ symbol is defined by target convention usually // to the start of the .got or .got.plt section. InputSection *GotSection = In.GotPlt; if (!Target->GotBaseSymInGotPlt) GotSection = In.MipsGot ? cast(In.MipsGot) : cast(In.Got); ElfSym::GlobalOffsetTable->Section = GotSection; } // .rela_iplt_{start,end} mark the start and the end of .rela.plt section. if (ElfSym::RelaIpltStart && !In.RelaIplt->empty()) { ElfSym::RelaIpltStart->Section = In.RelaIplt; ElfSym::RelaIpltEnd->Section = In.RelaIplt; ElfSym::RelaIpltEnd->Value = In.RelaIplt->getSize(); } PhdrEntry *Last = nullptr; PhdrEntry *LastRO = nullptr; for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) { if (P->p_type != PT_LOAD) continue; Last = P; if (!(P->p_flags & PF_W)) LastRO = P; } if (LastRO) { // _etext is the first location after the last read-only loadable segment. if (ElfSym::Etext1) ElfSym::Etext1->Section = LastRO->LastSec; if (ElfSym::Etext2) ElfSym::Etext2->Section = LastRO->LastSec; } if (Last) { // _edata points to the end of the last mapped initialized section. OutputSection *Edata = nullptr; for (OutputSection *OS : OutputSections) { if (OS->Type != SHT_NOBITS) Edata = OS; if (OS == Last->LastSec) break; } if (ElfSym::Edata1) ElfSym::Edata1->Section = Edata; if (ElfSym::Edata2) ElfSym::Edata2->Section = Edata; // _end is the first location after the uninitialized data region. if (ElfSym::End1) ElfSym::End1->Section = Last->LastSec; if (ElfSym::End2) ElfSym::End2->Section = Last->LastSec; } if (ElfSym::Bss) ElfSym::Bss->Section = findSection(".bss"); // Setup MIPS _gp_disp/__gnu_local_gp symbols which should // be equal to the _gp symbol's value. if (ElfSym::MipsGp) { // Find GP-relative section with the lowest address // and use this address to calculate default _gp value. for (OutputSection *OS : OutputSections) { if (OS->Flags & SHF_MIPS_GPREL) { ElfSym::MipsGp->Section = OS; ElfSym::MipsGp->Value = 0x7ff0; break; } } } } // We want to find how similar two ranks are. // The more branches in getSectionRank that match, the more similar they are. // Since each branch corresponds to a bit flag, we can just use // countLeadingZeros. static int getRankProximityAux(OutputSection *A, OutputSection *B) { return countLeadingZeros(A->SortRank ^ B->SortRank); } static int getRankProximity(OutputSection *A, BaseCommand *B) { if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(B)) return getRankProximityAux(A, Sec); return -1; } // When placing orphan sections, we want to place them after symbol assignments // so that an orphan after // begin_foo = .; // foo : { *(foo) } // end_foo = .; // doesn't break the intended meaning of the begin/end symbols. // We don't want to go over sections since findOrphanPos is the // one in charge of deciding the order of the sections. // We don't want to go over changes to '.', since doing so in // rx_sec : { *(rx_sec) } // . = ALIGN(0x1000); // /* The RW PT_LOAD starts here*/ // rw_sec : { *(rw_sec) } // would mean that the RW PT_LOAD would become unaligned. static bool shouldSkip(BaseCommand *Cmd) { if (auto *Assign = dyn_cast(Cmd)) return Assign->Name != "."; return false; } // We want to place orphan sections so that they share as much // characteristics with their neighbors as possible. For example, if // both are rw, or both are tls. template static std::vector::iterator findOrphanPos(std::vector::iterator B, std::vector::iterator E) { OutputSection *Sec = cast(*E); // Find the first element that has as close a rank as possible. auto I = std::max_element(B, E, [=](BaseCommand *A, BaseCommand *B) { return getRankProximity(Sec, A) < getRankProximity(Sec, B); }); if (I == E) return E; // Consider all existing sections with the same proximity. int Proximity = getRankProximity(Sec, *I); for (; I != E; ++I) { auto *CurSec = dyn_cast(*I); if (!CurSec) continue; if (getRankProximity(Sec, CurSec) != Proximity || Sec->SortRank < CurSec->SortRank) break; } auto IsOutputSec = [](BaseCommand *Cmd) { return isa(Cmd); }; auto J = std::find_if(llvm::make_reverse_iterator(I), llvm::make_reverse_iterator(B), IsOutputSec); I = J.base(); // As a special case, if the orphan section is the last section, put // it at the very end, past any other commands. // This matches bfd's behavior and is convenient when the linker script fully // specifies the start of the file, but doesn't care about the end (the non // alloc sections for example). auto NextSec = std::find_if(I, E, IsOutputSec); if (NextSec == E) return E; while (I != E && shouldSkip(*I)) ++I; return I; } // Builds section order for handling --symbol-ordering-file. static DenseMap buildSectionOrder() { DenseMap SectionOrder; // Use the rarely used option -call-graph-ordering-file to sort sections. if (!Config->CallGraphProfile.empty()) return computeCallGraphProfileOrder(); if (Config->SymbolOrderingFile.empty()) return SectionOrder; struct SymbolOrderEntry { int Priority; bool Present; }; // Build a map from symbols to their priorities. Symbols that didn't // appear in the symbol ordering file have the lowest priority 0. // All explicitly mentioned symbols have negative (higher) priorities. DenseMap SymbolOrder; int Priority = -Config->SymbolOrderingFile.size(); for (StringRef S : Config->SymbolOrderingFile) SymbolOrder.insert({S, {Priority++, false}}); // Build a map from sections to their priorities. auto AddSym = [&](Symbol &Sym) { auto It = SymbolOrder.find(Sym.getName()); if (It == SymbolOrder.end()) return; SymbolOrderEntry &Ent = It->second; Ent.Present = true; maybeWarnUnorderableSymbol(&Sym); if (auto *D = dyn_cast(&Sym)) { if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast_or_null(D->Section)) { int &Priority = SectionOrder[cast(Sec->Repl)]; Priority = std::min(Priority, Ent.Priority); } } }; // We want both global and local symbols. We get the global ones from the // symbol table and iterate the object files for the local ones. for (Symbol *Sym : Symtab->getSymbols()) if (!Sym->isLazy()) AddSym(*Sym); for (InputFile *File : ObjectFiles) for (Symbol *Sym : File->getSymbols()) if (Sym->isLocal()) AddSym(*Sym); if (Config->WarnSymbolOrdering) for (auto OrderEntry : SymbolOrder) if (!OrderEntry.second.Present) warn("symbol ordering file: no such symbol: " + OrderEntry.first); return SectionOrder; } // Sorts the sections in ISD according to the provided section order. static void sortISDBySectionOrder(InputSectionDescription *ISD, const DenseMap &Order) { std::vector UnorderedSections; std::vector> OrderedSections; uint64_t UnorderedSize = 0; for (InputSection *IS : ISD->Sections) { auto I = Order.find(IS); if (I == Order.end()) { UnorderedSections.push_back(IS); UnorderedSize += IS->getSize(); continue; } OrderedSections.push_back({IS, I->second}); } llvm::sort(OrderedSections, [&](std::pair A, std::pair B) { return A.second < B.second; }); // Find an insertion point for the ordered section list in the unordered // section list. On targets with limited-range branches, this is the mid-point // of the unordered section list. This decreases the likelihood that a range // extension thunk will be needed to enter or exit the ordered region. If the // ordered section list is a list of hot functions, we can generally expect // the ordered functions to be called more often than the unordered functions, // making it more likely that any particular call will be within range, and // therefore reducing the number of thunks required. // // For example, imagine that you have 8MB of hot code and 32MB of cold code. // If the layout is: // // 8MB hot // 32MB cold // // only the first 8-16MB of the cold code (depending on which hot function it // is actually calling) can call the hot code without a range extension thunk. // However, if we use this layout: // // 16MB cold // 8MB hot // 16MB cold // // both the last 8-16MB of the first block of cold code and the first 8-16MB // of the second block of cold code can call the hot code without a thunk. So // we effectively double the amount of code that could potentially call into // the hot code without a thunk. size_t InsPt = 0; if (Target->getThunkSectionSpacing() && !OrderedSections.empty()) { uint64_t UnorderedPos = 0; for (; InsPt != UnorderedSections.size(); ++InsPt) { UnorderedPos += UnorderedSections[InsPt]->getSize(); if (UnorderedPos > UnorderedSize / 2) break; } } ISD->Sections.clear(); for (InputSection *IS : makeArrayRef(UnorderedSections).slice(0, InsPt)) ISD->Sections.push_back(IS); for (std::pair P : OrderedSections) ISD->Sections.push_back(P.first); for (InputSection *IS : makeArrayRef(UnorderedSections).slice(InsPt)) ISD->Sections.push_back(IS); } static void sortSection(OutputSection *Sec, const DenseMap &Order) { StringRef Name = Sec->Name; // Sort input sections by section name suffixes for // __attribute__((init_priority(N))). if (Name == ".init_array" || Name == ".fini_array") { if (!Script->HasSectionsCommand) Sec->sortInitFini(); return; } // Sort input sections by the special rule for .ctors and .dtors. if (Name == ".ctors" || Name == ".dtors") { if (!Script->HasSectionsCommand) Sec->sortCtorsDtors(); return; } // Never sort these. if (Name == ".init" || Name == ".fini") return; // Sort input sections by priority using the list provided // by --symbol-ordering-file. if (!Order.empty()) for (BaseCommand *B : Sec->SectionCommands) if (auto *ISD = dyn_cast(B)) sortISDBySectionOrder(ISD, Order); } // If no layout was provided by linker script, we want to apply default // sorting for special input sections. This also handles --symbol-ordering-file. template void Writer::sortInputSections() { // Build the order once since it is expensive. DenseMap Order = buildSectionOrder(); for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base)) sortSection(Sec, Order); } template void Writer::sortSections() { Script->adjustSectionsBeforeSorting(); // Don't sort if using -r. It is not necessary and we want to preserve the // relative order for SHF_LINK_ORDER sections. if (Config->Relocatable) return; sortInputSections(); for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) { auto *OS = dyn_cast(Base); if (!OS) continue; OS->SortRank = getSectionRank(OS); // We want to assign rude approximation values to OutSecOff fields // to know the relative order of the input sections. We use it for // sorting SHF_LINK_ORDER sections. See resolveShfLinkOrder(). uint64_t I = 0; for (InputSection *Sec : getInputSections(OS)) Sec->OutSecOff = I++; } if (!Script->HasSectionsCommand) { // We know that all the OutputSections are contiguous in this case. auto IsSection = [](BaseCommand *Base) { return isa(Base); }; std::stable_sort( llvm::find_if(Script->SectionCommands, IsSection), llvm::find_if(llvm::reverse(Script->SectionCommands), IsSection).base(), compareSections); return; } // Orphan sections are sections present in the input files which are // not explicitly placed into the output file by the linker script. // // The sections in the linker script are already in the correct // order. We have to figuere out where to insert the orphan // sections. // // The order of the sections in the script is arbitrary and may not agree with // compareSections. This means that we cannot easily define a strict weak // ordering. To see why, consider a comparison of a section in the script and // one not in the script. We have a two simple options: // * Make them equivalent (a is not less than b, and b is not less than a). // The problem is then that equivalence has to be transitive and we can // have sections a, b and c with only b in a script and a less than c // which breaks this property. // * Use compareSectionsNonScript. Given that the script order doesn't have // to match, we can end up with sections a, b, c, d where b and c are in the // script and c is compareSectionsNonScript less than b. In which case d // can be equivalent to c, a to b and d < a. As a concrete example: // .a (rx) # not in script // .b (rx) # in script // .c (ro) # in script // .d (ro) # not in script // // The way we define an order then is: // * Sort only the orphan sections. They are in the end right now. // * Move each orphan section to its preferred position. We try // to put each section in the last position where it can share // a PT_LOAD. // // There is some ambiguity as to where exactly a new entry should be // inserted, because Commands contains not only output section // commands but also other types of commands such as symbol assignment // expressions. There's no correct answer here due to the lack of the // formal specification of the linker script. We use heuristics to // determine whether a new output command should be added before or // after another commands. For the details, look at shouldSkip // function. auto I = Script->SectionCommands.begin(); auto E = Script->SectionCommands.end(); auto NonScriptI = std::find_if(I, E, [](BaseCommand *Base) { if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base)) return Sec->SectionIndex == UINT32_MAX; return false; }); // Sort the orphan sections. std::stable_sort(NonScriptI, E, compareSections); // As a horrible special case, skip the first . assignment if it is before any // section. We do this because it is common to set a load address by starting // the script with ". = 0xabcd" and the expectation is that every section is // after that. auto FirstSectionOrDotAssignment = std::find_if(I, E, [](BaseCommand *Cmd) { return !shouldSkip(Cmd); }); if (FirstSectionOrDotAssignment != E && isa(**FirstSectionOrDotAssignment)) ++FirstSectionOrDotAssignment; I = FirstSectionOrDotAssignment; while (NonScriptI != E) { auto Pos = findOrphanPos(I, NonScriptI); OutputSection *Orphan = cast(*NonScriptI); // As an optimization, find all sections with the same sort rank // and insert them with one rotate. unsigned Rank = Orphan->SortRank; auto End = std::find_if(NonScriptI + 1, E, [=](BaseCommand *Cmd) { return cast(Cmd)->SortRank != Rank; }); std::rotate(Pos, NonScriptI, End); NonScriptI = End; } Script->adjustSectionsAfterSorting(); } static bool compareByFilePosition(InputSection *A, InputSection *B) { // Synthetic, i. e. a sentinel section, should go last. if (A->kind() == InputSectionBase::Synthetic || B->kind() == InputSectionBase::Synthetic) return A->kind() != InputSectionBase::Synthetic; InputSection *LA = A->getLinkOrderDep(); InputSection *LB = B->getLinkOrderDep(); OutputSection *AOut = LA->getParent(); OutputSection *BOut = LB->getParent(); if (AOut != BOut) return AOut->SectionIndex < BOut->SectionIndex; return LA->OutSecOff < LB->OutSecOff; } // This function is used by the --merge-exidx-entries to detect duplicate // .ARM.exidx sections. It is Arm only. // // The .ARM.exidx section is of the form: // | PREL31 offset to function | Unwind instructions for function | // where the unwind instructions are either a small number of unwind // instructions inlined into the table entry, the special CANT_UNWIND value of // 0x1 or a PREL31 offset into a .ARM.extab Section that contains unwind // instructions. // // We return true if all the unwind instructions in the .ARM.exidx entries of // Cur can be merged into the last entry of Prev. static bool isDuplicateArmExidxSec(InputSection *Prev, InputSection *Cur) { // References to .ARM.Extab Sections have bit 31 clear and are not the // special EXIDX_CANTUNWIND bit-pattern. auto IsExtabRef = [](uint32_t Unwind) { return (Unwind & 0x80000000) == 0 && Unwind != 0x1; }; struct ExidxEntry { ulittle32_t Fn; ulittle32_t Unwind; }; // Get the last table Entry from the previous .ARM.exidx section. const ExidxEntry &PrevEntry = Prev->getDataAs().back(); if (IsExtabRef(PrevEntry.Unwind)) return false; // We consider the unwind instructions of an .ARM.exidx table entry // a duplicate if the previous unwind instructions if: // - Both are the special EXIDX_CANTUNWIND. // - Both are the same inline unwind instructions. // We do not attempt to follow and check links into .ARM.extab tables as // consecutive identical entries are rare and the effort to check that they // are identical is high. for (const ExidxEntry Entry : Cur->getDataAs()) if (IsExtabRef(Entry.Unwind) || Entry.Unwind != PrevEntry.Unwind) return false; // All table entries in this .ARM.exidx Section can be merged into the // previous Section. return true; } template void Writer::resolveShfLinkOrder() { for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { if (!(Sec->Flags & SHF_LINK_ORDER)) continue; // Link order may be distributed across several InputSectionDescriptions // but sort must consider them all at once. std::vector ScriptSections; std::vector Sections; for (BaseCommand *Base : Sec->SectionCommands) { if (auto *ISD = dyn_cast(Base)) { for (InputSection *&IS : ISD->Sections) { ScriptSections.push_back(&IS); Sections.push_back(IS); } } } std::stable_sort(Sections.begin(), Sections.end(), compareByFilePosition); if (!Config->Relocatable && Config->EMachine == EM_ARM && Sec->Type == SHT_ARM_EXIDX) { if (auto *Sentinel = dyn_cast(Sections.back())) { assert(Sections.size() >= 2 && "We should create a sentinel section only if there are " "alive regular exidx sections."); // The last executable section is required to fill the sentinel. // Remember it here so that we don't have to find it again. Sentinel->Highest = Sections[Sections.size() - 2]->getLinkOrderDep(); } // The EHABI for the Arm Architecture permits consecutive identical // table entries to be merged. We use a simple implementation that // removes a .ARM.exidx Input Section if it can be merged into the // previous one. This does not require any rewriting of InputSection // contents but misses opportunities for fine grained deduplication // where only a subset of the InputSection contents can be merged. if (Config->MergeArmExidx) { size_t Prev = 0; // The last one is a sentinel entry which should not be removed. for (size_t I = 1; I < Sections.size() - 1; ++I) { if (isDuplicateArmExidxSec(Sections[Prev], Sections[I])) Sections[I] = nullptr; else Prev = I; } } } for (int I = 0, N = Sections.size(); I < N; ++I) *ScriptSections[I] = Sections[I]; // Remove the Sections we marked as duplicate earlier. for (BaseCommand *Base : Sec->SectionCommands) if (auto *ISD = dyn_cast(Base)) llvm::erase_if(ISD->Sections, [](InputSection *IS) { return !IS; }); } } // For most RISC ISAs, we need to generate content that depends on the address // of InputSections. For example some architectures such as AArch64 use small // displacements for jump instructions that is the linker's responsibility for // creating range extension thunks for. As the generation of the content may // also alter InputSection addresses we must converge to a fixed point. template void Writer::maybeAddThunks() { if (!Target->NeedsThunks && !Config->AndroidPackDynRelocs && !Config->RelrPackDynRelocs) return; ThunkCreator TC; AArch64Err843419Patcher A64P; for (;;) { bool Changed = false; Script->assignAddresses(); if (Target->NeedsThunks) Changed |= TC.createThunks(OutputSections); if (Config->FixCortexA53Errata843419) { if (Changed) Script->assignAddresses(); Changed |= A64P.createFixes(); } if (In.MipsGot) In.MipsGot->updateAllocSize(); Changed |= In.RelaDyn->updateAllocSize(); if (In.RelrDyn) Changed |= In.RelrDyn->updateAllocSize(); if (!Changed) return; } } static void finalizeSynthetic(SyntheticSection *Sec) { if (Sec && !Sec->empty() && Sec->getParent()) Sec->finalizeContents(); } // In order to allow users to manipulate linker-synthesized sections, // we had to add synthetic sections to the input section list early, // even before we make decisions whether they are needed. This allows // users to write scripts like this: ".mygot : { .got }". // // Doing it has an unintended side effects. If it turns out that we // don't need a .got (for example) at all because there's no // relocation that needs a .got, we don't want to emit .got. // // To deal with the above problem, this function is called after // scanRelocations is called to remove synthetic sections that turn // out to be empty. static void removeUnusedSyntheticSections() { // All input synthetic sections that can be empty are placed after // all regular ones. We iterate over them all and exit at first // non-synthetic. for (InputSectionBase *S : llvm::reverse(InputSections)) { SyntheticSection *SS = dyn_cast(S); if (!SS) return; OutputSection *OS = SS->getParent(); if (!OS || !SS->empty()) continue; // If we reach here, then SS is an unused synthetic section and we want to // remove it from corresponding input section description of output section. for (BaseCommand *B : OS->SectionCommands) if (auto *ISD = dyn_cast(B)) llvm::erase_if(ISD->Sections, [=](InputSection *IS) { return IS == SS; }); } } // Returns true if a symbol can be replaced at load-time by a symbol // with the same name defined in other ELF executable or DSO. static bool computeIsPreemptible(const Symbol &B) { assert(!B.isLocal()); // Only symbols that appear in dynsym can be preempted. if (!B.includeInDynsym()) return false; // Only default visibility symbols can be preempted. if (B.Visibility != STV_DEFAULT) return false; // At this point copy relocations have not been created yet, so any // symbol that is not defined locally is preemptible. if (!B.isDefined()) return true; // If we have a dynamic list it specifies which local symbols are preemptible. if (Config->HasDynamicList) return false; if (!Config->Shared) return false; // -Bsymbolic means that definitions are not preempted. if (Config->Bsymbolic || (Config->BsymbolicFunctions && B.isFunc())) return false; return true; } // Create output section objects and add them to OutputSections. template void Writer::finalizeSections() { Out::PreinitArray = findSection(".preinit_array"); Out::InitArray = findSection(".init_array"); Out::FiniArray = findSection(".fini_array"); // The linker needs to define SECNAME_start, SECNAME_end and SECNAME_stop // symbols for sections, so that the runtime can get the start and end // addresses of each section by section name. Add such symbols. if (!Config->Relocatable) { addStartEndSymbols(); for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base)) addStartStopSymbols(Sec); } // Add _DYNAMIC symbol. Unlike GNU gold, our _DYNAMIC symbol has no type. // It should be okay as no one seems to care about the type. // Even the author of gold doesn't remember why gold behaves that way. // https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2002-03/msg00360.html if (In.Dynamic->Parent) Symtab->addDefined("_DYNAMIC", STV_HIDDEN, STT_NOTYPE, 0 /*Value*/, /*Size=*/0, STB_WEAK, In.Dynamic, /*File=*/nullptr); // Define __rel[a]_iplt_{start,end} symbols if needed. addRelIpltSymbols(); // RISC-V's gp can address +/- 2 KiB, set it to .sdata + 0x800 if not defined. if (Config->EMachine == EM_RISCV) if (!dyn_cast_or_null(Symtab->find("__global_pointer$"))) addOptionalRegular("__global_pointer$", findSection(".sdata"), 0x800); // This responsible for splitting up .eh_frame section into // pieces. The relocation scan uses those pieces, so this has to be // earlier. finalizeSynthetic(In.EhFrame); for (Symbol *S : Symtab->getSymbols()) { if (!S->IsPreemptible) S->IsPreemptible = computeIsPreemptible(*S); if (S->isGnuIFunc() && Config->ZIfuncnoplt) S->ExportDynamic = true; } // Scan relocations. This must be done after every symbol is declared so that // we can correctly decide if a dynamic relocation is needed. if (!Config->Relocatable) forEachRelSec(scanRelocations); if (In.Plt && !In.Plt->empty()) In.Plt->addSymbols(); if (In.Iplt && !In.Iplt->empty()) In.Iplt->addSymbols(); if (!Config->AllowShlibUndefined) { // Error on undefined symbols in a shared object, if all of its DT_NEEDED // entires are seen. These cases would otherwise lead to runtime errors // reported by the dynamic linker. // // ld.bfd traces all DT_NEEDED to emulate the logic of the dynamic linker to // catch more cases. That is too much for us. Our approach resembles the one // used in ld.gold, achieves a good balance to be useful but not too smart. for (InputFile *File : SharedFiles) { SharedFile *F = cast>(File); F->AllNeededIsKnown = llvm::all_of(F->DtNeeded, [&](StringRef Needed) { return Symtab->SoNames.count(Needed); }); } for (Symbol *Sym : Symtab->getSymbols()) if (Sym->isUndefined() && !Sym->isWeak()) if (auto *F = dyn_cast_or_null>(Sym->File)) if (F->AllNeededIsKnown) error(toString(F) + ": undefined reference to " + toString(*Sym)); } // Now that we have defined all possible global symbols including linker- // synthesized ones. Visit all symbols to give the finishing touches. for (Symbol *Sym : Symtab->getSymbols()) { if (!includeInSymtab(*Sym)) continue; if (In.SymTab) In.SymTab->addSymbol(Sym); if (Sym->includeInDynsym()) { In.DynSymTab->addSymbol(Sym); if (auto *File = dyn_cast_or_null>(Sym->File)) if (File->IsNeeded && !Sym->isUndefined()) InX::VerNeed->addSymbol(Sym); } } // Do not proceed if there was an undefined symbol. if (errorCount()) return; if (In.MipsGot) In.MipsGot->build(); removeUnusedSyntheticSections(); sortSections(); // Now that we have the final list, create a list of all the // OutputSections for convenience. for (BaseCommand *Base : Script->SectionCommands) if (auto *Sec = dyn_cast(Base)) OutputSections.push_back(Sec); // Prefer command line supplied address over other constraints. for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { auto I = Config->SectionStartMap.find(Sec->Name); if (I != Config->SectionStartMap.end()) Sec->AddrExpr = [=] { return I->second; }; } // This is a bit of a hack. A value of 0 means undef, so we set it // to 1 to make __ehdr_start defined. The section number is not // particularly relevant. Out::ElfHeader->SectionIndex = 1; for (size_t I = 0, E = OutputSections.size(); I != E; ++I) { OutputSection *Sec = OutputSections[I]; Sec->SectionIndex = I + 1; Sec->ShName = In.ShStrTab->addString(Sec->Name); } // Binary and relocatable output does not have PHDRS. // The headers have to be created before finalize as that can influence the // image base and the dynamic section on mips includes the image base. if (!Config->Relocatable && !Config->OFormatBinary) { Phdrs = Script->hasPhdrsCommands() ? Script->createPhdrs() : createPhdrs(); addPtArmExid(Phdrs); Out::ProgramHeaders->Size = sizeof(Elf_Phdr) * Phdrs.size(); // Find the TLS segment. This happens before the section layout loop so that // Android relocation packing can look up TLS symbol addresses. for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) if (P->p_type == PT_TLS) Out::TlsPhdr = P; } // Some symbols are defined in term of program headers. Now that we // have the headers, we can find out which sections they point to. setReservedSymbolSections(); // Dynamic section must be the last one in this list and dynamic // symbol table section (DynSymTab) must be the first one. finalizeSynthetic(In.DynSymTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.Bss); finalizeSynthetic(In.BssRelRo); finalizeSynthetic(In.GnuHashTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.HashTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.SymTabShndx); finalizeSynthetic(In.ShStrTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.StrTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.VerDef); finalizeSynthetic(In.DynStrTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.Got); finalizeSynthetic(In.MipsGot); finalizeSynthetic(In.IgotPlt); finalizeSynthetic(In.GotPlt); finalizeSynthetic(In.RelaDyn); finalizeSynthetic(In.RelrDyn); finalizeSynthetic(In.RelaIplt); finalizeSynthetic(In.RelaPlt); finalizeSynthetic(In.Plt); finalizeSynthetic(In.Iplt); finalizeSynthetic(In.EhFrameHdr); finalizeSynthetic(InX::VerSym); finalizeSynthetic(InX::VerNeed); finalizeSynthetic(In.Dynamic); if (!Script->HasSectionsCommand && !Config->Relocatable) fixSectionAlignments(); // After link order processing .ARM.exidx sections can be deduplicated, which // needs to be resolved before any other address dependent operation. resolveShfLinkOrder(); // Jump instructions in many ISAs have small displacements, and therefore they // cannot jump to arbitrary addresses in memory. For example, RISC-V JAL // instruction can target only +-1 MiB from PC. It is a linker's // responsibility to create and insert small pieces of code between sections // to extend the ranges if jump targets are out of range. Such code pieces are // called "thunks". // // We add thunks at this stage. We couldn't do this before this point because // this is the earliest point where we know sizes of sections and their // layouts (that are needed to determine if jump targets are in range). maybeAddThunks(); // maybeAddThunks may have added local symbols to the static symbol table. finalizeSynthetic(In.SymTab); finalizeSynthetic(In.PPC64LongBranchTarget); // Fill other section headers. The dynamic table is finalized // at the end because some tags like RELSZ depend on result // of finalizing other sections. for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) Sec->finalize(); } // Ensure data sections are not mixed with executable sections when // -execute-only is used. -execute-only is a feature to make pages executable // but not readable, and the feature is currently supported only on AArch64. template void Writer::checkExecuteOnly() { if (!Config->ExecuteOnly) return; for (OutputSection *OS : OutputSections) if (OS->Flags & SHF_EXECINSTR) for (InputSection *IS : getInputSections(OS)) if (!(IS->Flags & SHF_EXECINSTR)) error("cannot place " + toString(IS) + " into " + toString(OS->Name) + ": -execute-only does not support intermingling data and code"); } // The linker is expected to define SECNAME_start and SECNAME_end // symbols for a few sections. This function defines them. template void Writer::addStartEndSymbols() { // If a section does not exist, there's ambiguity as to how we // define _start and _end symbols for an init/fini section. Since // the loader assume that the symbols are always defined, we need to // always define them. But what value? The loader iterates over all // pointers between _start and _end to run global ctors/dtors, so if // the section is empty, their symbol values don't actually matter // as long as _start and _end point to the same location. // // That said, we don't want to set the symbols to 0 (which is // probably the simplest value) because that could cause some // program to fail to link due to relocation overflow, if their // program text is above 2 GiB. We use the address of the .text // section instead to prevent that failure. // // In a rare sitaution, .text section may not exist. If that's the // case, use the image base address as a last resort. OutputSection *Default = findSection(".text"); if (!Default) Default = Out::ElfHeader; auto Define = [=](StringRef Start, StringRef End, OutputSection *OS) { if (OS) { addOptionalRegular(Start, OS, 0); addOptionalRegular(End, OS, -1); } else { addOptionalRegular(Start, Default, 0); addOptionalRegular(End, Default, 0); } }; Define("__preinit_array_start", "__preinit_array_end", Out::PreinitArray); Define("__init_array_start", "__init_array_end", Out::InitArray); Define("__fini_array_start", "__fini_array_end", Out::FiniArray); if (OutputSection *Sec = findSection(".ARM.exidx")) Define("__exidx_start", "__exidx_end", Sec); } // If a section name is valid as a C identifier (which is rare because of // the leading '.'), linkers are expected to define __start_ and // __stop_ symbols. They are at beginning and end of the section, // respectively. This is not requested by the ELF standard, but GNU ld and // gold provide the feature, and used by many programs. template void Writer::addStartStopSymbols(OutputSection *Sec) { StringRef S = Sec->Name; if (!isValidCIdentifier(S)) return; addOptionalRegular(Saver.save("__start_" + S), Sec, 0, STV_PROTECTED); addOptionalRegular(Saver.save("__stop_" + S), Sec, -1, STV_PROTECTED); } static bool needsPtLoad(OutputSection *Sec) { if (!(Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC) || Sec->Noload) return false; // Don't allocate VA space for TLS NOBITS sections. The PT_TLS PHDR is // responsible for allocating space for them, not the PT_LOAD that // contains the TLS initialization image. if ((Sec->Flags & SHF_TLS) && Sec->Type == SHT_NOBITS) return false; return true; } // Linker scripts are responsible for aligning addresses. Unfortunately, most // linker scripts are designed for creating two PT_LOADs only, one RX and one // RW. This means that there is no alignment in the RO to RX transition and we // cannot create a PT_LOAD there. static uint64_t computeFlags(uint64_t Flags) { if (Config->Omagic) return PF_R | PF_W | PF_X; if (Config->ExecuteOnly && (Flags & PF_X)) return Flags & ~PF_R; if (Config->SingleRoRx && !(Flags & PF_W)) return Flags | PF_X; return Flags; } // Decide which program headers to create and which sections to include in each // one. template std::vector Writer::createPhdrs() { std::vector Ret; auto AddHdr = [&](unsigned Type, unsigned Flags) -> PhdrEntry * { Ret.push_back(make(Type, Flags)); return Ret.back(); }; // The first phdr entry is PT_PHDR which describes the program header itself. AddHdr(PT_PHDR, PF_R)->add(Out::ProgramHeaders); // PT_INTERP must be the second entry if exists. if (OutputSection *Cmd = findSection(".interp")) AddHdr(PT_INTERP, Cmd->getPhdrFlags())->add(Cmd); // Add the first PT_LOAD segment for regular output sections. uint64_t Flags = computeFlags(PF_R); PhdrEntry *Load = AddHdr(PT_LOAD, Flags); // Add the headers. We will remove them if they don't fit. Load->add(Out::ElfHeader); Load->add(Out::ProgramHeaders); for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { if (!(Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC)) break; if (!needsPtLoad(Sec)) continue; // Segments are contiguous memory regions that has the same attributes // (e.g. executable or writable). There is one phdr for each segment. // Therefore, we need to create a new phdr when the next section has // different flags or is loaded at a discontiguous address or memory // region using AT or AT> linker script command, respectively. At the same // time, we don't want to create a separate load segment for the headers, // even if the first output section has an AT or AT> attribute. uint64_t NewFlags = computeFlags(Sec->getPhdrFlags()); if (((Sec->LMAExpr || (Sec->LMARegion && (Sec->LMARegion != Load->FirstSec->LMARegion))) && Load->LastSec != Out::ProgramHeaders) || Sec->MemRegion != Load->FirstSec->MemRegion || Flags != NewFlags) { Load = AddHdr(PT_LOAD, NewFlags); Flags = NewFlags; } Load->add(Sec); } // Add a TLS segment if any. PhdrEntry *TlsHdr = make(PT_TLS, PF_R); for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Flags & SHF_TLS) TlsHdr->add(Sec); if (TlsHdr->FirstSec) Ret.push_back(TlsHdr); // Add an entry for .dynamic. if (OutputSection *Sec = In.Dynamic->getParent()) AddHdr(PT_DYNAMIC, Sec->getPhdrFlags())->add(Sec); // PT_GNU_RELRO includes all sections that should be marked as // read-only by dynamic linker after proccessing relocations. // Current dynamic loaders only support one PT_GNU_RELRO PHDR, give // an error message if more than one PT_GNU_RELRO PHDR is required. PhdrEntry *RelRo = make(PT_GNU_RELRO, PF_R); bool InRelroPhdr = false; bool IsRelroFinished = false; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { if (!needsPtLoad(Sec)) continue; if (isRelroSection(Sec)) { InRelroPhdr = true; if (!IsRelroFinished) RelRo->add(Sec); else error("section: " + Sec->Name + " is not contiguous with other relro" + " sections"); } else if (InRelroPhdr) { InRelroPhdr = false; IsRelroFinished = true; } } if (RelRo->FirstSec) Ret.push_back(RelRo); // PT_GNU_EH_FRAME is a special section pointing on .eh_frame_hdr. if (!In.EhFrame->empty() && In.EhFrameHdr && In.EhFrame->getParent() && In.EhFrameHdr->getParent()) AddHdr(PT_GNU_EH_FRAME, In.EhFrameHdr->getParent()->getPhdrFlags()) ->add(In.EhFrameHdr->getParent()); // PT_OPENBSD_RANDOMIZE is an OpenBSD-specific feature. That makes // the dynamic linker fill the segment with random data. if (OutputSection *Cmd = findSection(".openbsd.randomdata")) AddHdr(PT_OPENBSD_RANDOMIZE, Cmd->getPhdrFlags())->add(Cmd); // PT_GNU_STACK is a special section to tell the loader to make the // pages for the stack non-executable. If you really want an executable // stack, you can pass -z execstack, but that's not recommended for // security reasons. unsigned Perm = PF_R | PF_W; if (Config->ZExecstack) Perm |= PF_X; AddHdr(PT_GNU_STACK, Perm)->p_memsz = Config->ZStackSize; // PT_OPENBSD_WXNEEDED is a OpenBSD-specific header to mark the executable // is expected to perform W^X violations, such as calling mprotect(2) or // mmap(2) with PROT_WRITE | PROT_EXEC, which is prohibited by default on // OpenBSD. if (Config->ZWxneeded) AddHdr(PT_OPENBSD_WXNEEDED, PF_X); // Create one PT_NOTE per a group of contiguous .note sections. PhdrEntry *Note = nullptr; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { if (Sec->Type == SHT_NOTE && (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC)) { if (!Note || Sec->LMAExpr) Note = AddHdr(PT_NOTE, PF_R); Note->add(Sec); } else { Note = nullptr; } } return Ret; } template void Writer::addPtArmExid(std::vector &Phdrs) { if (Config->EMachine != EM_ARM) return; auto I = llvm::find_if(OutputSections, [](OutputSection *Cmd) { return Cmd->Type == SHT_ARM_EXIDX; }); if (I == OutputSections.end()) return; // PT_ARM_EXIDX is the ARM EHABI equivalent of PT_GNU_EH_FRAME PhdrEntry *ARMExidx = make(PT_ARM_EXIDX, PF_R); ARMExidx->add(*I); Phdrs.push_back(ARMExidx); } // The first section of each PT_LOAD, the first section in PT_GNU_RELRO and the // first section after PT_GNU_RELRO have to be page aligned so that the dynamic // linker can set the permissions. template void Writer::fixSectionAlignments() { auto PageAlign = [](OutputSection *Cmd) { if (Cmd && !Cmd->AddrExpr) Cmd->AddrExpr = [=] { return alignTo(Script->getDot(), Config->MaxPageSize); }; }; for (const PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) if (P->p_type == PT_LOAD && P->FirstSec) PageAlign(P->FirstSec); for (const PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) { if (P->p_type != PT_GNU_RELRO) continue; if (P->FirstSec) PageAlign(P->FirstSec); // Find the first section after PT_GNU_RELRO. If it is in a PT_LOAD we // have to align it to a page. auto End = OutputSections.end(); auto I = std::find(OutputSections.begin(), End, P->LastSec); if (I == End || (I + 1) == End) continue; OutputSection *Cmd = (*(I + 1)); if (needsPtLoad(Cmd)) PageAlign(Cmd); } } // Compute an in-file position for a given section. The file offset must be the // same with its virtual address modulo the page size, so that the loader can // load executables without any address adjustment. static uint64_t computeFileOffset(OutputSection *OS, uint64_t Off) { // File offsets are not significant for .bss sections. By convention, we keep // section offsets monotonically increasing rather than setting to zero. if (OS->Type == SHT_NOBITS) return Off; // If the section is not in a PT_LOAD, we just have to align it. if (!OS->PtLoad) return alignTo(Off, OS->Alignment); // The first section in a PT_LOAD has to have congruent offset and address // module the page size. OutputSection *First = OS->PtLoad->FirstSec; if (OS == First) { uint64_t Alignment = std::max(OS->Alignment, Config->MaxPageSize); return alignTo(Off, Alignment, OS->Addr); } // If two sections share the same PT_LOAD the file offset is calculated // using this formula: Off2 = Off1 + (VA2 - VA1). return First->Offset + OS->Addr - First->Addr; } // Set an in-file position to a given section and returns the end position of // the section. static uint64_t setFileOffset(OutputSection *OS, uint64_t Off) { Off = computeFileOffset(OS, Off); OS->Offset = Off; if (OS->Type == SHT_NOBITS) return Off; return Off + OS->Size; } template void Writer::assignFileOffsetsBinary() { uint64_t Off = 0; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC) Off = setFileOffset(Sec, Off); FileSize = alignTo(Off, Config->Wordsize); } static std::string rangeToString(uint64_t Addr, uint64_t Len) { return "[0x" + utohexstr(Addr) + ", 0x" + utohexstr(Addr + Len - 1) + "]"; } // Assign file offsets to output sections. template void Writer::assignFileOffsets() { uint64_t Off = 0; Off = setFileOffset(Out::ElfHeader, Off); Off = setFileOffset(Out::ProgramHeaders, Off); PhdrEntry *LastRX = nullptr; for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) if (P->p_type == PT_LOAD && (P->p_flags & PF_X)) LastRX = P; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { Off = setFileOffset(Sec, Off); if (Script->HasSectionsCommand) continue; // If this is a last section of the last executable segment and that // segment is the last loadable segment, align the offset of the // following section to avoid loading non-segments parts of the file. if (LastRX && LastRX->LastSec == Sec) Off = alignTo(Off, Target->PageSize); } SectionHeaderOff = alignTo(Off, Config->Wordsize); FileSize = SectionHeaderOff + (OutputSections.size() + 1) * sizeof(Elf_Shdr); // Our logic assumes that sections have rising VA within the same segment. // With use of linker scripts it is possible to violate this rule and get file // offset overlaps or overflows. That should never happen with a valid script // which does not move the location counter backwards and usually scripts do // not do that. Unfortunately, there are apps in the wild, for example, Linux // kernel, which control segment distribution explicitly and move the counter // backwards, so we have to allow doing that to support linking them. We // perform non-critical checks for overlaps in checkSectionOverlap(), but here // we want to prevent file size overflows because it would crash the linker. for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) { if (Sec->Type == SHT_NOBITS) continue; if ((Sec->Offset > FileSize) || (Sec->Offset + Sec->Size > FileSize)) error("unable to place section " + Sec->Name + " at file offset " + rangeToString(Sec->Offset, Sec->Size) + "; check your linker script for overflows"); } } // Finalize the program headers. We call this function after we assign // file offsets and VAs to all sections. template void Writer::setPhdrs() { for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) { OutputSection *First = P->FirstSec; OutputSection *Last = P->LastSec; if (First) { P->p_filesz = Last->Offset - First->Offset; if (Last->Type != SHT_NOBITS) P->p_filesz += Last->Size; P->p_memsz = Last->Addr + Last->Size - First->Addr; P->p_offset = First->Offset; P->p_vaddr = First->Addr; if (!P->HasLMA) P->p_paddr = First->getLMA(); } if (P->p_type == PT_LOAD) { P->p_align = std::max(P->p_align, Config->MaxPageSize); } else if (P->p_type == PT_GNU_RELRO) { P->p_align = 1; // The glibc dynamic loader rounds the size down, so we need to round up // to protect the last page. This is a no-op on FreeBSD which always // rounds up. P->p_memsz = alignTo(P->p_memsz, Target->PageSize); } if (P->p_type == PT_TLS && P->p_memsz) { if (!Config->Shared && (Config->EMachine == EM_ARM || Config->EMachine == EM_AARCH64)) { // On ARM/AArch64, reserve extra space (8 words) between the thread // pointer and an executable's TLS segment by overaligning the segment. // This reservation is needed for backwards compatibility with Android's // TCB, which allocates several slots after the thread pointer (e.g. // TLS_SLOT_STACK_GUARD==5). For simplicity, this overalignment is also // done on other operating systems. P->p_align = std::max(P->p_align, Config->Wordsize * 8); } // The TLS pointer goes after PT_TLS for variant 2 targets. At least glibc // will align it, so round up the size to make sure the offsets are // correct. P->p_memsz = alignTo(P->p_memsz, P->p_align); } } } // A helper struct for checkSectionOverlap. namespace { struct SectionOffset { OutputSection *Sec; uint64_t Offset; }; } // namespace // Check whether sections overlap for a specific address range (file offsets, // load and virtual adresses). static void checkOverlap(StringRef Name, std::vector &Sections, bool IsVirtualAddr) { llvm::sort(Sections, [=](const SectionOffset &A, const SectionOffset &B) { return A.Offset < B.Offset; }); // Finding overlap is easy given a vector is sorted by start position. // If an element starts before the end of the previous element, they overlap. for (size_t I = 1, End = Sections.size(); I < End; ++I) { SectionOffset A = Sections[I - 1]; SectionOffset B = Sections[I]; if (B.Offset >= A.Offset + A.Sec->Size) continue; // If both sections are in OVERLAY we allow the overlapping of virtual // addresses, because it is what OVERLAY was designed for. if (IsVirtualAddr && A.Sec->InOverlay && B.Sec->InOverlay) continue; errorOrWarn("section " + A.Sec->Name + " " + Name + " range overlaps with " + B.Sec->Name + "\n>>> " + A.Sec->Name + " range is " + rangeToString(A.Offset, A.Sec->Size) + "\n>>> " + B.Sec->Name + " range is " + rangeToString(B.Offset, B.Sec->Size)); } } // Check for overlapping sections and address overflows. // // In this function we check that none of the output sections have overlapping // file offsets. For SHF_ALLOC sections we also check that the load address // ranges and the virtual address ranges don't overlap template void Writer::checkSections() { // First, check that section's VAs fit in available address space for target. for (OutputSection *OS : OutputSections) if ((OS->Addr + OS->Size < OS->Addr) || (!ELFT::Is64Bits && OS->Addr + OS->Size > UINT32_MAX)) errorOrWarn("section " + OS->Name + " at 0x" + utohexstr(OS->Addr) + " of size 0x" + utohexstr(OS->Size) + " exceeds available address space"); // Check for overlapping file offsets. In this case we need to skip any // section marked as SHT_NOBITS. These sections don't actually occupy space in // the file so Sec->Offset + Sec->Size can overlap with others. If --oformat // binary is specified only add SHF_ALLOC sections are added to the output // file so we skip any non-allocated sections in that case. std::vector FileOffs; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Size > 0 && Sec->Type != SHT_NOBITS && (!Config->OFormatBinary || (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC))) FileOffs.push_back({Sec, Sec->Offset}); checkOverlap("file", FileOffs, false); // When linking with -r there is no need to check for overlapping virtual/load // addresses since those addresses will only be assigned when the final // executable/shared object is created. if (Config->Relocatable) return; // Checking for overlapping virtual and load addresses only needs to take // into account SHF_ALLOC sections since others will not be loaded. // Furthermore, we also need to skip SHF_TLS sections since these will be // mapped to other addresses at runtime and can therefore have overlapping // ranges in the file. std::vector VMAs; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Size > 0 && (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC) && !(Sec->Flags & SHF_TLS)) VMAs.push_back({Sec, Sec->Addr}); checkOverlap("virtual address", VMAs, true); // Finally, check that the load addresses don't overlap. This will usually be // the same as the virtual addresses but can be different when using a linker // script with AT(). std::vector LMAs; for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Size > 0 && (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC) && !(Sec->Flags & SHF_TLS)) LMAs.push_back({Sec, Sec->getLMA()}); checkOverlap("load address", LMAs, false); } // The entry point address is chosen in the following ways. // // 1. the '-e' entry command-line option; // 2. the ENTRY(symbol) command in a linker control script; // 3. the value of the symbol _start, if present; // 4. the number represented by the entry symbol, if it is a number; // 5. the address of the first byte of the .text section, if present; // 6. the address 0. static uint64_t getEntryAddr() { // Case 1, 2 or 3 if (Symbol *B = Symtab->find(Config->Entry)) return B->getVA(); // Case 4 uint64_t Addr; if (to_integer(Config->Entry, Addr)) return Addr; // Case 5 if (OutputSection *Sec = findSection(".text")) { if (Config->WarnMissingEntry) warn("cannot find entry symbol " + Config->Entry + "; defaulting to 0x" + utohexstr(Sec->Addr)); return Sec->Addr; } // Case 6 if (Config->WarnMissingEntry) warn("cannot find entry symbol " + Config->Entry + "; not setting start address"); return 0; } static uint16_t getELFType() { if (Config->Pic) return ET_DYN; if (Config->Relocatable) return ET_REL; return ET_EXEC; } static uint8_t getAbiVersion() { // MIPS non-PIC executable gets ABI version 1. if (Config->EMachine == EM_MIPS && getELFType() == ET_EXEC && (Config->EFlags & (EF_MIPS_PIC | EF_MIPS_CPIC)) == EF_MIPS_CPIC) return 1; return 0; } template void Writer::writeHeader() { uint8_t *Buf = Buffer->getBufferStart(); // For executable segments, the trap instructions are written before writing // the header. Setting Elf header bytes to zero ensures that any unused bytes // in header are zero-cleared, instead of having trap instructions. memset(Buf, 0, sizeof(Elf_Ehdr)); memcpy(Buf, "\177ELF", 4); // Write the ELF header. auto *EHdr = reinterpret_cast(Buf); EHdr->e_ident[EI_CLASS] = Config->Is64 ? ELFCLASS64 : ELFCLASS32; EHdr->e_ident[EI_DATA] = Config->IsLE ? ELFDATA2LSB : ELFDATA2MSB; EHdr->e_ident[EI_VERSION] = EV_CURRENT; EHdr->e_ident[EI_OSABI] = Config->OSABI; EHdr->e_ident[EI_ABIVERSION] = getAbiVersion(); EHdr->e_type = getELFType(); EHdr->e_machine = Config->EMachine; EHdr->e_version = EV_CURRENT; EHdr->e_entry = getEntryAddr(); EHdr->e_shoff = SectionHeaderOff; EHdr->e_flags = Config->EFlags; EHdr->e_ehsize = sizeof(Elf_Ehdr); EHdr->e_phnum = Phdrs.size(); EHdr->e_shentsize = sizeof(Elf_Shdr); if (!Config->Relocatable) { EHdr->e_phoff = sizeof(Elf_Ehdr); EHdr->e_phentsize = sizeof(Elf_Phdr); } // Write the program header table. auto *HBuf = reinterpret_cast(Buf + EHdr->e_phoff); for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) { HBuf->p_type = P->p_type; HBuf->p_flags = P->p_flags; HBuf->p_offset = P->p_offset; HBuf->p_vaddr = P->p_vaddr; HBuf->p_paddr = P->p_paddr; HBuf->p_filesz = P->p_filesz; HBuf->p_memsz = P->p_memsz; HBuf->p_align = P->p_align; ++HBuf; } // Write the section header table. // // The ELF header can only store numbers up to SHN_LORESERVE in the e_shnum // and e_shstrndx fields. When the value of one of these fields exceeds // SHN_LORESERVE ELF requires us to put sentinel values in the ELF header and // use fields in the section header at index 0 to store // the value. The sentinel values and fields are: // e_shnum = 0, SHdrs[0].sh_size = number of sections. // e_shstrndx = SHN_XINDEX, SHdrs[0].sh_link = .shstrtab section index. auto *SHdrs = reinterpret_cast(Buf + EHdr->e_shoff); size_t Num = OutputSections.size() + 1; if (Num >= SHN_LORESERVE) SHdrs->sh_size = Num; else EHdr->e_shnum = Num; uint32_t StrTabIndex = In.ShStrTab->getParent()->SectionIndex; if (StrTabIndex >= SHN_LORESERVE) { SHdrs->sh_link = StrTabIndex; EHdr->e_shstrndx = SHN_XINDEX; } else { EHdr->e_shstrndx = StrTabIndex; } for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) Sec->writeHeaderTo(++SHdrs); } // Open a result file. template void Writer::openFile() { uint64_t MaxSize = Config->Is64 ? INT64_MAX : UINT32_MAX; if (MaxSize < FileSize) { error("output file too large: " + Twine(FileSize) + " bytes"); return; } unlinkAsync(Config->OutputFile); unsigned Flags = 0; if (!Config->Relocatable) Flags = FileOutputBuffer::F_executable; Expected> BufferOrErr = FileOutputBuffer::create(Config->OutputFile, FileSize, Flags); if (!BufferOrErr) error("failed to open " + Config->OutputFile + ": " + llvm::toString(BufferOrErr.takeError())); else Buffer = std::move(*BufferOrErr); } template void Writer::writeSectionsBinary() { uint8_t *Buf = Buffer->getBufferStart(); for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Flags & SHF_ALLOC) Sec->writeTo(Buf + Sec->Offset); } static void fillTrap(uint8_t *I, uint8_t *End) { for (; I + 4 <= End; I += 4) memcpy(I, &Target->TrapInstr, 4); } // Fill the last page of executable segments with trap instructions // instead of leaving them as zero. Even though it is not required by any // standard, it is in general a good thing to do for security reasons. // // We'll leave other pages in segments as-is because the rest will be // overwritten by output sections. template void Writer::writeTrapInstr() { if (Script->HasSectionsCommand) return; // Fill the last page. uint8_t *Buf = Buffer->getBufferStart(); for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) if (P->p_type == PT_LOAD && (P->p_flags & PF_X)) fillTrap(Buf + alignDown(P->p_offset + P->p_filesz, Target->PageSize), Buf + alignTo(P->p_offset + P->p_filesz, Target->PageSize)); // Round up the file size of the last segment to the page boundary iff it is // an executable segment to ensure that other tools don't accidentally // trim the instruction padding (e.g. when stripping the file). PhdrEntry *Last = nullptr; for (PhdrEntry *P : Phdrs) if (P->p_type == PT_LOAD) Last = P; if (Last && (Last->p_flags & PF_X)) Last->p_memsz = Last->p_filesz = alignTo(Last->p_filesz, Target->PageSize); } // Write section contents to a mmap'ed file. template void Writer::writeSections() { uint8_t *Buf = Buffer->getBufferStart(); OutputSection *EhFrameHdr = nullptr; if (In.EhFrameHdr && !In.EhFrameHdr->empty()) EhFrameHdr = In.EhFrameHdr->getParent(); // In -r or -emit-relocs mode, write the relocation sections first as in // ELf_Rel targets we might find out that we need to modify the relocated // section while doing it. for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec->Type == SHT_REL || Sec->Type == SHT_RELA) Sec->writeTo(Buf + Sec->Offset); for (OutputSection *Sec : OutputSections) if (Sec != EhFrameHdr && Sec->Type != SHT_REL && Sec->Type != SHT_RELA) Sec->writeTo(Buf + Sec->Offset); // The .eh_frame_hdr depends on .eh_frame section contents, therefore // it should be written after .eh_frame is written. if (EhFrameHdr) EhFrameHdr->writeTo(Buf + EhFrameHdr->Offset); } template void Writer::writeBuildId() { if (!In.BuildId || !In.BuildId->getParent()) return; // Compute a hash of all sections of the output file. uint8_t *Start = Buffer->getBufferStart(); uint8_t *End = Start + FileSize; In.BuildId->writeBuildId({Start, End}); } template void elf::writeResult(); template void elf::writeResult(); template void elf::writeResult(); template void elf::writeResult();