The non-preemptible SHN_ABS symbol with a pc-relative relocation should be
disallowed when generating shared object (pic and pie). Generally, the
following cases, which refer to pr25749, will cause a symbol be
non-preemptible,
* -pie, or -shared with -symbolic
* STV_HIDDEN, STV_INTERNAL, STV_PROTECTED
* Have dynamic symbol table, but without the symbol
* VER_NDX_LOCAL
However, PCREL_HI20/LO12 relocs are always bind locally when generating
shared object, so not only the non-preemptible absolute symbol need to
be disallowed, all absolute symbol references need but except that they
are defined in linker script. If we also disallow the absolute symbol
in linker script, then the glibc-linux toolchain build failed, so regard
them as pc-relative symbols, just like what x86 did.
Maybe we should add this check for all pc-relative relocations, rather
than just handle in R_RISCV_PCREL relocs. Ideally, since the value of
SHN_ABS symbol is a constant, only S - A relocations should be allowed
in the shared object, so only BFD_RELOC_8/16/32/64 are allowed, which
means R_RISCV_32/R_RISCV_64.
bfd/
PR 28789
* elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_elf_check_relocs): The absolute symbol cannot be
referneced with pc-relative relocation when generating shared object.
ld/
PR 28789
* ld/testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/ld-riscv-elf.exp: Updated.
* ld/testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/pcrel-reloc*: New testcases.
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README for LD
This is the GNU linker. It is distributed with other "binary
utilities" which should be in ../binutils. See ../binutils/README for
more general notes, including where to send bug reports.
There are many features of the linker:
* The linker uses a Binary File Descriptor library (../bfd)
that it uses to read and write object files. This helps
insulate the linker itself from the format of object files.
* The linker supports a number of different object file
formats. It can even handle multiple formats at once:
Read two input formats and write a third.
* The linker can be configured for cross-linking.
* The linker supports a control language.
* There is a user manual (ld.texi), as well as the
beginnings of an internals manual (ldint.texi).
Installation
============
See ../binutils/README.
If you want to make a cross-linker, you may want to specify
a different search path of -lfoo libraries than the default.
You can do this by setting the LIB_PATH variable in ./Makefile
or using the --with-lib-path configure switch.
To build just the linker, make the target all-ld from the top level
directory (one directory above this one).
Porting to a new target
=======================
See the ldint.texi manual.
Reporting bugs etc
===========================
See ../binutils/README.
Known problems
==============
The Solaris linker normally exports all dynamic symbols from an
executable. The GNU linker does not do this by default. This is
because the GNU linker tries to present the same interface for all
similar targets (in this case, all native ELF targets). This does not
matter for normal programs, but it can make a difference for programs
which try to dlopen an executable, such as PERL or Tcl. You can make
the GNU linker export all dynamic symbols with the -E or
--export-dynamic command line option.
HP/UX 9.01 has a shell bug that causes the linker scripts to be
generated incorrectly. The symptom of this appears to be "fatal error
- scanner input buffer overflow" error messages. There are various
workarounds to this:
* Build and install bash, and build with "make SHELL=bash".
* Update to a version of HP/UX with a working shell (e.g., 9.05).
* Replace "(. ${srcdir}/scripttempl/${SCRIPT_NAME}.sc)" in
genscripts.sh with "sh ${srcdir}..." (no parens) and make sure the
emulparams script used exports any shell variables it sets.
Copyright (C) 2012-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification,
are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright
notice and this notice are preserved.