From 69da35b57aebf07cd707c56e36453aa7580c65f0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Clifton Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 17:25:02 +0000 Subject: Clarify and extend the documentation in the Machine Dependent, WIN32 section. --- ld/ld.texinfo | 168 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------- 1 file changed, 136 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-) (limited to 'ld/ld.texinfo') diff --git a/ld/ld.texinfo b/ld/ld.texinfo index c7fd318..5af7a4f 100644 --- a/ld/ld.texinfo +++ b/ld/ld.texinfo @@ -898,17 +898,17 @@ Using this option has a significant performance cost. It is best to use it only when there are unavoidable circular references between two or more archives. -@kindex --accept-unknown-input-format -@kindex --no-accept-unknown-input-format -@item --accept-unknown-input-format -@itemx --no-accept-unknown-input-format -Tells the linker to accept input files whoes format cannot be +@kindex --accept-unknown-input-arch +@kindex --no-accept-unknown-input-arch +@item --accept-unknown-input-arch +@itemx --no-accept-unknown-input-arch +Tells the linker to accept input files whose architecture cannot be recognised. The assumption is that the user knows what they are doing -and deliberately wants to link in these unknown format input files. -This was the default behaviour of the linker, before release 2.14. -The default behaviour from release 2.14 onwards is to reject such -input files, and so the @samp{--accept-unknown-input-format} option -has been added to restore the old behaviour. +and deliberately wants to link in these unknown input files. This was +the default behaviour of the linker, before release 2.14. The default +behaviour from release 2.14 onwards is to reject such input files, and +so the @samp{--accept-unknown-input-arch} option has been added to +restore the old behaviour. @kindex -assert @var{keyword} @item -assert @var{keyword} @@ -3975,7 +3975,7 @@ specifies what data to write in the gaps (@pxref{Output Section Fill}). @cindex dot inside sections Note: @code{.} actually refers to the byte offset from the start of the current containing object. Normally this is the @code{SECTIONS} -statement, whoes start address is 0, hence @code{.} can be used as an +statement, whose start address is 0, hence @code{.} can be used as an absolute address. If @code{.} is used inside a section description however, it refers to the byte offset from the start of that section, not an absolute address. Thus in a script like this: @@ -4453,52 +4453,110 @@ This section describes some of the win32 specific @command{ld} issues. @table @emph @cindex import libraries @item import libraries -The standard Windows linker creates and uses so called import +The standard Windows linker creates and uses so-called import libraries, which contains information for linking to dll's. They are -regular static archives and could be handled as any other static -archive. The cygwin and mingw ports of @command{ld} has specific +regular static archives and are handled as any other static +archive. The cygwin and mingw ports of @command{ld} have specific support for creating such libraries provided with the @samp{--out-implib} command line option. @cindex automatic data imports @item automatic data imports The standard Windows dll format supports data imports from dlls only -by adding special decorations (dllimport/dllexport), which lets the +by adding special decorations (dllimport/dllexport), which let the compiler produce specific assembler instructions to deal with this -issue. This increase the needed porting efforts, especially for big +issue. This increases the effort necessary to port existing Un*x +code to these platforms, especially for large c++ libraries and applications. The auto-import feature, which was -initially provided by Paul Sokolovsky, allows this decoration to be -skipped, archiving a behavior more like @command{ld} on other -platforms. This feature is enabled with the @samp{--enable-auto-import} -command line option. +initially provided by Paul Sokolovsky, allows one to omit the +decorations to archieve a behavior that conforms to that on POSIX/Un*x +platforms. This feature is enabled with the @samp{--enable-auto-import} +command-line option, although it is enabled by default on cygwin/mingw. +The @samp{--enable-auto-import} option itself now serves mainly to +suppress any warnings that are ordinarily emitted when linked objects +trigger the feature's use. + +auto-import of variables does not always work flawlessly without +additional assistance. Sometimes, you will see this message + +"variable '' can't be auto-imported. Please read the +documentation for ld's @code{--enable-auto-import} for details." + +The @samp{--enable-auto-import} documentation explains why this error +occurs, and several methods that can be used to overcome this difficulty. +One of these methods is the @emph{runtime pseudo-relocs} feature, described +below. + +@cindex runtime pseudo-relocation +For complex variables imported from DLLs (such as structs or classes), +object files typically contain a base address for the variable and an +offset (@emph{addend}) within the variable--to specify a particular +field or public member, for instance. Unfortunately, the runtime loader used +in win32 environments is incapable of fixing these references at runtime +without the additional information supplied by dllimport/dllexport decorations. +The standard auto-import feature described above is unable to resolve these +references. + +The @samp{--enable-runtime-pseudo-relocs} switch allows these references to +be resolved without error, while leaving the task of adjusting the references +themselves (with their non-zero addends) to specialized code provided by the +runtime environment. Recent versions of the cygwin and mingw environments and +compilers provide this runtime support; older versions do not. However, the +support is only necessary on the developer's platform; the compiled result will +run without error on an older system. + +@samp{--enable-runtime-pseudo-relocs} is not the default; it must be explicitly +enabled as needed. @cindex direct linking to a dll @item direct linking to a dll The cygwin/mingw ports of @command{ld} support the direct linking, including data symbols, to a dll without the usage of any import -libraries. Using this feature can save a lot of linking time and -memory, especially in case of bigger libraries or applications. This -is because bigger libraries can have very large import libraries. (The -author has seen import libraries about 10 MB size). +libraries. This is much faster and uses much less memory than does the +traditional import library method, expecially when linking large +libraries or applications. When @command{ld} creates an import lib, each +function or variable exported from the dll is stored in its own bfd, even +though a single bfd could contain many exports. The overhead involved in +storing, loading, and processing so many bfd's is quite large, and explains the +tremendous time, memory, and storage needed to link against particularly +large or complex libraries when using import libs. + +Linking directly to a dll uses no extra command-line switches other than +@samp{-L} and @samp{-l}, because @command{ld} already searches for a number +of names to match each library. All that is needed from the developer's +perspective is an understanding of this search, in order to force ld to +select the dll instead of an import library. + -Linking directly to a dll can done with the standard command line -options @samp{-L} and @samp{-l}. This is because @command{ld} has -built in support for several dll names, as shown below. In this list -@samp{xxx} means the basic library name like "png" for the png -library: +For instance, when ld is called with the argument @samp{-lxxx} it will attempt +to find, in the first directory of its search path, @example libxxx.dll.a xxx.dll.a libxxx.a -cygxxx.dll +cygxxx.dll (*) libxxx.dll xxx.dll @end example +before moving on to the next directory in the search path. + +(*) Actually, this is not @samp{cygxxx.dll} but in fact is @samp{xxx.dll}, +where @samp{} is set by the @command{ld} option +@samp{--dll-search-prefix=}. In the case of cygwin, the standard gcc spec +file includes @samp{--dll-search-prefix=cyg}, so in effect we actually search for +@samp{cygxxx.dll}. + +Other win32-based unix environments, such as mingw or pw32, may use other +@samp{}es, although at present only cygwin makes use of this feature. It +was originally intended to help avoid name conflicts among dll's built for the +various win32/un*x environments, so that (for example) two versions of a zlib dll +could coexist on the same machine. + The generic cygwin/mingw path layout uses a @samp{bin} directory for applications and dll's and a @samp{lib} directory for the import -libraries. +libraries (using cygwin nomenclature): @example bin/ @@ -4508,13 +4566,19 @@ lib/ libxxx.a (in case of static archive) @end example -Linking to a dll can be done by two ways: +Linking directly to a dll without using the import library can be +done two ways: 1. Use the dll directly by adding the @samp{bin} path to the link line @example gcc -Wl,-verbose -o a.exe -L../bin/ -lxxx @end example +However, as the dll's often have version numbers appended to their names +(@samp{cygncurses-5.dll}) this will often fail, unless one specifies +@samp{-L../bin -lncurses-5} to include the version. Import libs are generally +not versioned, and do not have this difficulty. + 2. Create a symbolic link from the dll to a file in the @samp{lib} directory according to the above mentioned search pattern. This should be used to avoid unwanted changes in the tools needed for @@ -4529,6 +4593,46 @@ Then you can link without any make environment changes. @example gcc -Wl,-verbose -o a.exe -L../lib/ -lxxx @end example + +This technique also avoids the version number problems, because the following is +perfectly legal + +@example +bin/ + cygxxx-5.dll +lib/ + libxxx.dll.a -> ../bin/cygxxx-5.dll +@end example + +Linking directly to a dll without using an import lib will work +even when auto-import features are exercised, and even when +@samp{--enable-runtime-pseudo-relocs} is used. + +Given the improvements in speed and memory usage, one might justifiably +wonder why import libraries are used at all. There are three reasons: + +1. Until recently, the link-directly-to-dll functionality did @emph{not} +work with auto-imported data. + +2. Sometimes, it is useful to rename exports. For instance, the cygwin +kernel does this regularly: a symbol @samp{_foo} will be exported as +@samp{_foo}, but also as @samp{foo} by using special directives in the +DEF file when creating the import library. This ability is not +present without import libs. + +3. Also, it's sometimes necessary to include pure static objects +within the import library (which otherwise contains only bfd's for +indirection symbols that point to the exports of a dll). Again, +the import lib for the cygwin kernel makes use of this ability, and +it is not possible to do this without an import lib. + +So, import libs are not going away. But the ability to replace +true import libs with a simple symbolic link to (or a copy of) +a dll, in most cases, is a useful addition to the suite of tools +binutils makes available to the win32 developer. Given the +massive improvements in memory requirements during linking, storage +requirements, and linking speed, we expect that many developers +will soon begin to use this feature whenever possible. @end table @ifclear GENERIC -- cgit v1.1