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| author | Motiejus Jakštys <motiejus@uber.com> | 2022-12-16 09:29:09 +0200 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Andrew Kelley <andrew@ziglang.org> | 2022-12-16 07:46:47 -0500 |
| commit | b3f4e0d091d83874af849f1d1a2328ad7c154d42 (patch) | |
| tree | 1d9d749d6b5024c87b5dcd37a1b08dedb98c0064 /lib/std/multi_array_list.zig | |
| parent | cf85462a78aa767ce7cfd1ebdb06d7405e1b0e5e (diff) | |
| download | zig-b3f4e0d091d83874af849f1d1a2328ad7c154d42.tar.gz zig-b3f4e0d091d83874af849f1d1a2328ad7c154d42.zip | |
Elf: switch link order of libcompiler_rt and libc
Given `main.go`:
package main
import _ "os/user"
func main() {}
Compiling it to linux/arm64:
$ CGO_CFLAGS='-O0' GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm64 CGO_ENABLED=1 CC="zig cc -target aarch64-linux-gnu.2.28" go build main.go
Results in this error:
runtime/cgo(.text): unknown symbol memset in callarm64
runtime/cgo(.text): unknown symbol memset in callarm64
runtime/cgo(.text): relocation target memset not defined
In the midst of intermediate compilations files we can see this commmand:
ld.lld -o _cgo_.o <...> /tmp/go-build206961058/b043/_x009.o <...> ~/.cache/zig/.../libcompiler_rt.a <...> ~/.cache/.../libc.so.6
`_x009.o` needs memset:
$ readelf -Ws ./b043/_x009.o | grep memset
22: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE GLOBAL DEFAULT UND memset
Both `libcompiler_rt.a` and `libc.so.6` provide it:
$ readelf -Ws ~/.cache/zig/.../libcompiler_rt.a | grep memset
870: 0000000000000000 318 FUNC WEAK DEFAULT 519 memset
$ readelf -Ws ~/.cache/zig/.../libc.so.6 | grep -w memset
476: 000000000001d34c 0 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT 7 memset@@GLIBC_2.2.5
Since `libcompiler_rt.a` comes before libc in the linker line, the
resulting `_cgo_.o` still links to a weak, unversioned memset:
$ readelf -Ws ./b043/_cgo_.o | grep -w memset
40: 000000000022c07c 160 FUNC WEAK DEFAULT 14 memset
719: 000000000022c07c 160 FUNC WEAK DEFAULT 14 memset
Since the final linking step is done by Golang's linker, it does not
know of `libcompiler_rt.a`, and fails to link with the error message
above. However, Go linker does recognize memset from glibc. If we
specify an `-lc` equivalent before the `libcompiler_rt.a`, it will link
to memset from libc:
$ readelf -Wa ./b043/_x009.o |grep memset
14: 0000000000000000 0 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT UND memset@GLIBC_2.17 (2)
157: 0000000000000000 0 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT UND memset@GLIBC_2.17
... and then `main.go` will compile+link successfully.
Why doesn't Go linker take memset from glibc? An educated guess: Go
determines whether to link with glibc from what the program asks (I
presume `.dynsym`). Since `memset` is no longer attributed to glibc, Go
skips linking to glibc altogether.
Bonus question: curious why `-O0` is necessary? Because when
optimizations are enabled (the default), the C compiler replaces
`memset` function call with plain `stp` instructions (on aarch64).
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/std/multi_array_list.zig')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions
