# # Unusual variables checked by this code: # NOP - four byte opcode for no-op (defaults to 0) # NO_SMALL_DATA - no .sbss/.sbss2/.sdata/.sdata2 sections if not # empty. # DATA_ADDR - if end-of-text-plus-one-page isn't right for data start # INITIAL_READONLY_SECTIONS - at start of text segment # OTHER_READONLY_SECTIONS - other than .text .init .rodata ... # (e.g., .PARISC.milli) # OTHER_TEXT_SECTIONS - these get put in .text when relocating # OTHER_READWRITE_SECTIONS - other than .data .bss .ctors .sdata ... # (e.g., .PARISC.global) # ATTRS_SECTIONS - at the end # OTHER_SECTIONS - at the end # EXECUTABLE_SYMBOLS - symbols that must be defined for an # executable (e.g., _DYNAMIC_LINK) # TEXT_START_SYMBOLS - symbols that appear at the start of the # .text section. # DATA_START_SYMBOLS - symbols that appear at the start of the # .data section. # OTHER_GOT_SYMBOLS - symbols defined just before .got. # OTHER_GOT_SECTIONS - sections just after .got. # OTHER_SDATA_SECTIONS - sections just after .sdata. # OTHER_BSS_SYMBOLS - symbols that appear at the start of the # .bss section besides __bss_start. # DATA_PLT - .plt should be in data segment, not text segment. # BSS_PLT - .plt should be in bss segment # TEXT_DYNAMIC - .dynamic in text segment, not data segment. # EMBEDDED - whether this is for an embedded system. # SHLIB_TEXT_START_ADDR - if set, add to SIZEOF_HEADERS to set # start address of shared library. # INPUT_FILES - INPUT command of files to always include # WRITABLE_RODATA - if set, the .rodata section should be writable # INIT_START, INIT_END - statements just before and just after # combination of .init sections. # FINI_START, FINI_END - statements just before and just after # combination of .fini sections. # STACK_ADDR - start of a .stack section. # OTHER_SYMBOLS - symbols to place right at the end of the script. # # When adding sections, do note that the names of some sections are used # when specifying the start address of the next. # # Many sections come in three flavours. There is the 'real' section, # like ".data". Then there are the per-procedure or per-variable # sections, generated by -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections in GCC, # and useful for --gc-sections, which for a variable "foo" might be # ".data.foo". Then there are the linkonce sections, for which the linker # eliminates duplicates, which are named like ".gnu.linkonce.d.foo". # The exact correspondences are: # # Section Linkonce section # .text .gnu.linkonce.t.foo # .rodata .gnu.linkonce.r.foo # .data .gnu.linkonce.d.foo # .bss .gnu.linkonce.b.foo # .sdata .gnu.linkonce.s.foo # .sbss .gnu.linkonce.sb.foo # .sdata2 .gnu.linkonce.s2.foo # .sbss2 .gnu.linkonce.sb2.foo # .debug_info .gnu.linkonce.wi.foo # # Each of these can also have corresponding .rel.* and .rela.* sections. test -z "$ENTRY" && ENTRY=_start test -z "${BIG_OUTPUT_FORMAT}" && BIG_OUTPUT_FORMAT=${OUTPUT_FORMAT} test -z "${LITTLE_OUTPUT_FORMAT}" && LITTLE_OUTPUT_FORMAT=${OUTPUT_FORMAT} if [ -z "$MACHINE" ]; then OUTPUT_ARCH=${ARCH}; else OUTPUT_ARCH=${ARCH}:${MACHINE}; fi test -z "${ELFSIZE}" && ELFSIZE=32 test -z "${ALIGNMENT}" && ALIGNMENT="${ELFSIZE} / 8" test -z "$ATTRS_SECTIONS" && ATTRS_SECTIONS=".gnu.attributes 0 : { KEEP (*(.gnu.attributes)) }" test "$LD_FLAG" = "N" && DATA_ADDR=. INTERP=".interp : { *(.interp) }" PLT=".plt : { *(.plt) }" DYNAMIC=".dynamic : { *(.dynamic) }" RODATA=".rodata : { *(.rodata${RELOCATING+ .rodata.* .gnu.linkonce.r.*}) }" if test -z "${NO_SMALL_DATA}"; then SBSS=".sbss : { ${RELOCATING+PROVIDE (__sbss_start = .);} ${RELOCATING+PROVIDE (___sbss_start = .);} *(.dynsbss) *(.sbss${RELOCATING+ .sbss.* .gnu.linkonce.sb.*}) *(.scommon) ${RELOCATING+PROVIDE (__sbss_end = .);} ${RELOCATING+PROVIDE (___sbss_end = .);} }" SBSS2=".sbss2 : { *(.sbss2${RELOCATING+ .sbss2.* .gnu.linkonce.sb2.*}) }" SDATA="/* We want the small data sections together, so single-instruction offsets can access them all, and initialized data all before uninitialized, so we can shorten the on-disk segment size. */ .sdata : { ${RELOCATING+${SDATA_START_SYMBOLS}} *(.sdata${RELOCATING+ .sdata.* .gnu.linkonce.s.*}) }" SDATA2=".sdata2 : { *(.sdata2${RELOCATING+ .sdata2.* .gnu.linkonce.s2.*}) }" REL_SDATA=".rel.sdata : { *(.rel.sdata${RELOCATING+ .rel.sdata.* .rel.gnu.linkonce.s.*}) } .rela.sdata : { *(.rela.sdata${RELOCATING+ .rela.sdata.* .rela.gnu.linkonce.s.*}) }" REL_SBSS=".rel.sbss : { *(.rel.sbss${RELOCATING+ .rel.sbss.* .rel.gnu.linkonce.sb.*}) } .rela.sbss : { *(.rela.sbss${RELOCATING+ .rela.sbss.* .rela.gnu.linkonce.sb.*}) }" REL_SDATA2=".rel.sdata2 : { *(.rel.sdata2${RELOCATING+ .rel.sdata2.* .rel.gnu.linkonce.s2.*}) } .rela.sdata2 : { *(.rela.sdata2${RELOCATING+ .rela.sdata2.* .rela.gnu.linkonce.s2.*}) }" REL_SBSS2=".rel.sbss2 : { *(.rel.sbss2${RELOCATING+ .rel.sbss2.* .rel.gnu.linkonce.sb2.*}) } .rela.sbss2 : { *(.rela.sbss2${RELOCATING+ .rela.sbss2.* .rela.gnu.linkonce.sb2.*}) }" fi CTOR=" ${CONSTRUCTING+${CTOR_START}} /* gcc uses crtbegin.o to find the start of the constructors, so we make sure it is first. Because this is a wildcard, it doesn't matter if the user does not actually link against crtbegin.o; the linker won't look for a file to match a wildcard. The wildcard also means that it doesn't matter which directory crtbegin.o is in. */ KEEP (*crtbegin.o(.ctors)) KEEP (*crtbegin?.o(.ctors)) /* We don't want to include the .ctor section from the crtend.o file until after the sorted ctors. The .ctor section from the crtend file contains the end of ctors marker and it must be last */ KEEP (*(EXCLUDE_FILE (*crtend.o *crtend?.o $OTHER_EXCLUDE_FILES) .ctors)) KEEP (*(SORT(.ctors.*))) KEEP (*(.ctors)) ${CONSTRUCTING+${CTOR_END}} " DTOR=" ${CONSTRUCTING+${DTOR_START}} KEEP (*crtbegin.o(.dtors)) KEEP (*crtbegin?.o(.dtors)) KEEP (*(EXCLUDE_FILE (*crtend.o *crtend?.o $OTHER_EXCLUDE_FILES) .dtors)) KEEP (*(SORT(.dtors.*))) KEEP (*(.dtors)) ${CONSTRUCTING+${DTOR_END}} " STACK=" .stack ${RELOCATING+${STACK_ADDR}} : { ${RELOCATING+_stack = .;} *(.stack) }" test -z "${TEXT_BASE_ADDRESS}" && TEXT_BASE_ADDRESS="${TEXT_START_ADDR}" cat <