binutils-gdb/gold/script.h

412 lines
12 KiB
C++

// script.h -- handle linker scripts for gold -*- C++ -*-
// Copyright 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
// Written by Ian Lance Taylor <iant@google.com>.
// This file is part of gold.
// This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
// Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston,
// MA 02110-1301, USA.
// We implement a subset of the original GNU ld linker script language
// for compatibility. The goal is not to implement the entire
// language. It is merely to implement enough to handle common uses.
// In particular we need to handle /usr/lib/libc.so on a typical
// GNU/Linux system, and we want to handle linker scripts used by the
// Linux kernel build.
#ifndef GOLD_SCRIPT_H
#define GOLD_SCRIPT_H
#include <cstdio>
#include <vector>
#include "script-sections.h"
namespace gold
{
class General_options;
class Command_line;
class Symbol_table;
class Layout;
class Input_argument;
class Input_objects;
class Input_group;
class Input_file;
class Output_segment;
class Task_token;
class Workqueue;
struct Version_dependency_list;
struct Version_expression_list;
struct Version_tree;
// This class represents an expression in a linker script.
class Expression
{
protected:
// These should only be created by child classes.
Expression()
{ }
public:
virtual ~Expression()
{ }
// Return the value of the expression which is not permitted to
// refer to the dot symbol.
uint64_t
eval(const Symbol_table*, const Layout*);
// Return the value of an expression which is permitted to refer to
// the dot symbol. DOT_VALUE is the absolute value of the dot
// symbol. DOT_SECTION is the section in which dot is defined; it
// should be NULL if the dot symbol has an absolute value (e.g., is
// defined in a SECTIONS clause outside of any output section
// definition). This sets *RESULT_SECTION to indicate where the
// value is defined. If the value is absolute *RESULT_SECTION will
// be NULL. Note that the returned value is still an absolute
// value; to get a section relative value the caller must subtract
// the section address.
uint64_t
eval_with_dot(const Symbol_table*, const Layout*, uint64_t dot_value,
Output_section* dot_section, Output_section** result_section);
// Return the value of an expression which may or may not be
// permitted to refer to the dot symbol, depending on
// is_dot_available.
uint64_t
eval_maybe_dot(const Symbol_table*, const Layout*, bool is_dot_available,
uint64_t dot_value, Output_section* dot_section,
Output_section** result_section);
// Print the expression to the FILE. This is for debugging.
virtual void
print(FILE*) const = 0;
protected:
struct Expression_eval_info;
public:
// Compute the value of the expression (implemented by child class).
// This is public rather than protected because it is called
// directly by children of Expression on other Expression objects.
virtual uint64_t
value(const Expression_eval_info*) = 0;
private:
// May not be copied.
Expression(const Expression&);
Expression& operator=(const Expression&);
};
// Version_script_info stores information parsed from the version
// script, either provided by --version-script or as part of a linker
// script. A single Version_script_info object per target is owned by
// Script_options.
class Version_script_info
{
public:
~Version_script_info();
// Clear everything.
void
clear();
// Return whether any version were defined in the version script.
bool
empty() const
{ return this->version_trees_.empty(); }
// Return the version associated with the given symbol name.
// Strings are allocated out of the stringpool given in the
// constructor. Strings are allocated out of the stringpool given
// in the constructor.
const std::string&
get_symbol_version(const char* symbol) const
{ return get_symbol_version_helper(symbol, true); }
// Return whether this symbol matches the local: section of a
// version script (it doesn't matter which).
bool
symbol_is_local(const char* symbol) const
{
return (get_symbol_version(symbol).empty()
&& !get_symbol_version_helper(symbol, false).empty());
}
// Return the names of versions defined in the version script.
// Strings are allocated out of the stringpool given in the
// constructor.
std::vector<std::string>
get_versions() const;
// Return the list of dependencies for this version.
std::vector<std::string>
get_dependencies(const char* version) const;
// The following functions should only be used by the bison helper
// functions. They allocate new structs whose memory belongs to
// Version_script_info. The bison functions copy the information
// from the version script into these structs.
struct Version_dependency_list*
allocate_dependency_list();
struct Version_expression_list*
allocate_expression_list();
struct Version_tree*
allocate_version_tree();
// Print contents to the FILE. This is for debugging.
void
print(FILE*) const;
private:
void
print_expression_list(FILE* f, const Version_expression_list*) const;
const std::string& get_symbol_version_helper(const char* symbol,
bool check_global) const;
std::vector<struct Version_dependency_list*> dependency_lists_;
std::vector<struct Version_expression_list*> expression_lists_;
std::vector<struct Version_tree*> version_trees_;
};
// This class manages assignments to symbols. These can appear in
// three different locations in scripts: outside of a SECTIONS clause,
// within a SECTIONS clause, and within an output section definition
// within a SECTIONS clause. This can also appear on the command line
// via the --defsym command line option.
class Symbol_assignment
{
public:
Symbol_assignment(const char* name, size_t namelen, Expression* val,
bool provide, bool hidden)
: name_(name, namelen), val_(val), provide_(provide), hidden_(hidden),
sym_(NULL)
{ }
// Add the symbol to the symbol table.
void
add_to_table(Symbol_table*);
// Finalize the symbol value.
void
finalize(Symbol_table*, const Layout*);
// Finalize the symbol value when it can refer to the dot symbol.
void
finalize_with_dot(Symbol_table*, const Layout*, uint64_t dot_value,
Output_section* dot_section);
// Set the symbol value, but only if the value is absolute. This is
// used while processing a SECTIONS clause. We assume that dot is
// an absolute value here.
void
set_if_absolute(Symbol_table*, const Layout*, bool is_dot_available,
uint64_t dot_value);
// Print the assignment to the FILE. This is for debugging.
void
print(FILE*) const;
private:
// Shared by finalize and finalize_with_dot.
void
finalize_maybe_dot(Symbol_table*, const Layout*, bool is_dot_available,
uint64_t dot_value, Output_section* dot_section);
// Sized version of finalize.
template<int size>
void
sized_finalize(Symbol_table*, const Layout*, bool is_dot_available,
uint64_t dot_value, Output_section*);
// Symbol name.
std::string name_;
// Expression to assign to symbol.
Expression* val_;
// Whether the assignment should be provided (only set if there is
// an undefined reference to the symbol.
bool provide_;
// Whether the assignment should be hidden.
bool hidden_;
// The entry in the symbol table.
Symbol* sym_;
};
// This class manages assertions in linker scripts. These can appear
// in all the places where a Symbol_assignment can appear.
class Script_assertion
{
public:
Script_assertion(Expression* check, const char* message,
size_t messagelen)
: check_(check), message_(message, messagelen)
{ }
// Check the assertion.
void
check(const Symbol_table*, const Layout*);
// Print the assertion to the FILE. This is for debugging.
void
print(FILE*) const;
private:
// The expression to check.
Expression* check_;
// The message to issue if the expression fails.
std::string message_;
};
// We can read a linker script in two different contexts: when
// initially parsing the command line, and when we find an input file
// which is actually a linker script. Also some of the data which can
// be set by a linker script can also be set via command line options
// like -e and --defsym. This means that we have a type of data which
// can be set both during command line option parsing and while
// reading input files. We store that data in an instance of this
// object. We will keep pointers to that instance in both the
// Command_line and Layout objects.
class Script_options
{
public:
Script_options();
// The entry address.
const char*
entry() const
{ return this->entry_.empty() ? NULL : this->entry_.c_str(); }
// Set the entry address.
void
set_entry(const char* entry, size_t length)
{ this->entry_.assign(entry, length); }
// Add a symbol to be defined.
void
add_symbol_assignment(const char* name, size_t length, Expression* value,
bool provide, bool hidden);
// Add an assertion.
void
add_assertion(Expression* check, const char* message, size_t messagelen);
// Define a symbol from the command line.
bool
define_symbol(const char* definition);
// Add all symbol definitions to the symbol table.
void
add_symbols_to_table(Symbol_table*);
// Finalize the symbol values. Also check assertions.
void
finalize_symbols(Symbol_table*, const Layout*);
// Version information parsed from a version script. Everything
// else has a pointer to this object.
Version_script_info*
version_script_info()
{ return &this->version_script_info_; }
// A SECTIONS clause parsed from a linker script. Everything else
// has a pointer to this object.
Script_sections*
script_sections()
{ return &this->script_sections_; }
// Whether we saw a SECTIONS clause.
bool
saw_sections_clause() const
{ return this->script_sections_.saw_sections_clause(); }
// Whether we saw a PHDRS clause.
bool
saw_phdrs_clause() const
{ return this->script_sections_.saw_phdrs_clause(); }
// Set section addresses using a SECTIONS clause. Return the
// segment which should hold the file header and segment headers;
// this may return NULL, in which case the headers are not in a
// loadable segment.
Output_segment*
set_section_addresses(Symbol_table*, Layout*);
// Print the script to the FILE. This is for debugging.
void
print(FILE*) const;
private:
// We keep a list of symbol assignments which occur outside of a
// SECTIONS clause.
typedef std::vector<Symbol_assignment*> Symbol_assignments;
// We keep a list of all assertions whcih occur outside of a
// SECTIONS clause.
typedef std::vector<Script_assertion*> Assertions;
// The entry address. This will be empty if not set.
std::string entry_;
// Symbols to set.
Symbol_assignments symbol_assignments_;
// Assertions to check.
Assertions assertions_;
// Version information parsed from a version script.
Version_script_info version_script_info_;
// Information from any SECTIONS clauses.
Script_sections script_sections_;
};
// FILE was found as an argument on the command line, but was not
// recognized as an ELF file. Try to read it as a script. We've
// already read BYTES of data into P. Return true if the file was
// handled. This has to handle /usr/lib/libc.so on a GNU/Linux
// system.
bool
read_input_script(Workqueue*, const General_options&, Symbol_table*, Layout*,
Dirsearch*, Input_objects*, Input_group*,
const Input_argument*, Input_file*, const unsigned char* p,
off_t bytes, Task_token* this_blocker,
Task_token* next_blocker);
// FILE was found as an argument to --script (-T).
// Read it as a script, and execute its contents immediately.
bool
read_commandline_script(const char* filename, Command_line*);
// FILE was found as an argument to --version-script. Read it as a
// version script, and store its contents in
// cmdline->script_options()->version_script_info().
bool
read_version_script(const char* filename, Command_line* cmdline);
} // End namespace gold.
#endif // !defined(GOLD_SCRIPT_H)