# Test linking directly to S-records. # By Ian Lance Taylor, Cygnus Support. # Copyright (C) 1999-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This file is part of the GNU Binutils. # # 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. # Get the offset from an S-record line to the start of the data. proc srec_off { l } { if [string match "S1*" $l] { return 8 } else { if [string match "S2*" $l] { return 10 } else { if [string match "S3*" $l] { return 12 } else { return -1 } } } } # See if an S-record line contains only zero data. proc srec_zero { l } { if [string match "S\[0789\]*" $l] { return 1 } # Strip the address and checksum. if [string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { set l [string range $l [srec_off $l] [expr [string length $l] - 3]] } else { return 0 } # The rest must be zero. return [string match "" [string trim $l "0"]] } # Get the address of an S-record line. proc srec_addr { l } { if [string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { set addr [string range $l 4 [expr [srec_off $l] - 1]] } else { return -1 } return "0x$addr" } # Get the number of data bytes in an S-record line. proc srec_len { l } { if ![string match "S\[123\]*" $l] { return 0 } return [expr "0x[string range $l 2 3]" - ([srec_off $l] - 4) / 2 - 1] } # Extract bytes from an S-record line. proc srec_extract { l start len } { set off [srec_off $l] set rlen [srec_len $l] set stop [expr $start + $len] if { $stop > $rlen } { set stop [expr $rlen] } set start [expr $start * 2 + $off] set stop [expr $stop * 2 + $off - 1] return [string range $l $start $stop] } # See if a range of bytes in an S-record line is all zeroes. proc srec_zero_range { l start len } { return [string match "" [string trim [srec_extract $l $start $len] "0"]] } # Trim an S-record line such that the specified number of bytes remain # at the end. proc srec_trim { l leave } { set off [srec_off $l] set addr [srec_addr $l] set len [srec_len $l] if { $leave >= $len } { return $l } set s1 [string range $l 0 1] set s2 [format "%02x" [expr ($off - 4) / 2 + $leave + 1]] set s3 [format "%0[expr $off - 4]x" [expr $addr + $len - $leave]] set s4 [string range $l [expr [string length $l] - ($leave * 2) - 2] end] set s "${s1}${s2}${s3}${s4}" verbose "srec_trim { '$l' $leave } returning '$s'" 2 return $s } # Report failure when comparing S-record lines proc srec_compare_fail { which l1 l2 } { send_log "comparison failure $which:\n$l1\n$l2\n" verbose "comparison failure $which:\n$l1\n$l2" } # Compare S-record files. We don't want to fuss about things like # extra zeroes. Note that BFD always sorts S-records by address. proc srec_compare { f1 f2 } { set e1 [gets $f1 l1] set e2 [gets $f2 l2] while { $e1 != -1 } { set l1 [string trimright $l1 "\r\n"] set l2 [string trimright $l2 "\r\n"] if { $e2 == -1 } { # If l1 contains data, it must be zero. if ![srec_zero $l1] { send_log "data after EOF: $l1\n" verbose "data after EOF: $l1" return 0 } } else { if { [string compare $l1 $l2] == 0 } { set e1 [gets $f1 l1] set e2 [gets $f2 l2] } else { if { [srec_zero $l1] } { set e1 [gets $f1 l1] } else { if { [srec_zero $l2] } { set e2 [gets $f2 l2] } else { # The strings are not the same, and neither is all zeroes. set a1 [srec_addr $l1] set n1 [srec_len $l1] set a2 [srec_addr $l2] set n2 [srec_len $l2] if { $a1 < $a2 && ![srec_zero_range $l1 0 [expr $a2 - $a1]] } { verbose "$a1 $a2 [srec_extract $l1 0 [expr $a2 - $a1]]" 2 srec_compare_fail 1 $l1 $l2 return 0 } if { $a2 < $a1 && ![srec_zero_range $l2 0 [expr $a1 - $a2]] } { srec_compare_fail 2 $l1 $l2 return 0 } # Here we know that any initial data in both lines is # zero. Now make sure that any overlapping data matches. if { $a1 < $a2 } { set os1 [expr $a2 - $a1] set os2 0 } else { set os1 0 set os2 [expr $a1 - $a2] } if { $a1 + $n1 < $a2 + $n2 } { set ol [expr $n1 - $os1] } else { set ol [expr $n2 - $os2] } set x1 [srec_extract $l1 $os1 $ol] set x2 [srec_extract $l2 $os2 $ol] if { [string compare $x1 $x2] != 0 } { verbose "$os1 $ol $x1" 2 verbose "$os2 $ol $x2" 2 srec_compare_fail 3 $l1 $l2 return 0 } # These strings match. Trim the data from the larger # string, read a new copy of the smaller string, and # continue. if { $a1 + $n1 < $a2 + $n2 } { set l2 [srec_trim $l2 [expr ($a2 + $n2) - ($a1 + $n1)]] set e1 [gets $f1 l1] } else { if { $a1 + $n1 > $a2 + $n2 } { set l1 [srec_trim $l1 [expr ($a1 + $n1) - ($a2 + $n2)]] set e2 [gets $f2 l2] } else { set e1 [gets $f1 l1] set e2 [gets $f2 l2] } } } } } } } # We've reached the end of the first file. The remainder of the # second file must contain only zeroes. while { $e2 != -1 } { set l2 [string trimright $l2 "\r\n"] if ![srec_zero $l2] { send_log "data after EOF: $l2\n" verbose "data after EOF: $l2" return 0 } set e2 [gets $f2 l2] } return 1 } # Link twice, objcopy, and compare proc run_srec_test { test objs } { global ld global objcopy global sizeof_headers global host_triplet # Tell the ELF linker to not do anything clever with .eh_frame, # not to put anything in small data, and define various symbols. set flags "--traditional-format -G 0 -e 0 " append flags [ld_link_defsyms] # If the linker script uses SIZEOF_HEADERS, use a -Ttext argument # to force both the normal link and the S-record link to be put in # the same place. We don't always use -Ttext because it interacts # poorly with a.out. if { $sizeof_headers } { set flags "$flags -Ttext 0x1000" } # ARM targets cannot convert format in the linker # using the --oformat command line switch if {[istarget aarch64*-*-*] || \ [istarget arm*-*-*]} { setup_xfail "aarch64-*-*" setup_xfail "aarch64_be-*-*" setup_xfail "arm*-*-*" } # The AVR target does not correctly process # relocs when output format is not ELF. if [istarget avr-*-*] { setup_xfail "avr-*-*" } # Epiphany needs some help too if [istarget epiphany*-*-*] { set flags "$flags --defsym _start=00000060" setup_xfail "epiphany*-*-*" } if [istarget m681*-*-*] { set flags "$flags --defsym _start=0xc000" setup_xfail "m681*-*-*" } if [istarget m68hc1*-*-*] { set flags "$flags --defsym _start=0xc000" setup_xfail "m68hc1*-*-*" } if [istarget m9s12x*-*-*] { set flags "$flags --defsym _start=0xc000" setup_xfail "m9s12x*-*-*" } # MSP430 targets always relax. if [istarget msp430*-*-*] { setup_xfail "msp430*-*-*" } # The RISC-V target does not correctly process # relocs when output format is not ELF. if [istarget riscv*-*-*] { setup_xfail "riscv*-*-*" } # V850 targets need libgcc.a if [istarget v850*-*-elf] { set objs "$objs -L ../gcc -lgcc" } # Xtensa ELF targets relax by default; S-Record linker does not if [istarget xtensa*-*-*] { set flags "$flags -no-relax" } # PRU ELF target relaxes by default; S-Record linker does not if [istarget pru*-*-*] { set flags "$flags -no-relax" } if { ![ld_link $ld tmpdir/sr1 "$flags $objs"] \ || ![ld_link $ld tmpdir/sr2.sr "$flags --oformat srec $objs"] } { fail $test return } send_log "$objcopy -O srec tmpdir/sr1 tmpdir/sr1.sr\n" set exec_output [run_host_cmd "$objcopy" "-O srec tmpdir/sr1 tmpdir/sr1.sr"] set exec_output [prune_warnings $exec_output] if ![string match "" $exec_output] { send_log "$exec_output\n" verbose "$exec_output" unresolved $test return } set f1 [open tmpdir/sr1.sr r] set f2 [open tmpdir/sr2.sr r] if [srec_compare $f1 $f2] { pass $test } else { fail $test } close $f1 close $f2 } set test1 "S-records" set test2 "S-records with constructors" # See whether the default linker script uses SIZEOF_HEADERS. set exec_output [run_host_cmd "$ld" "--verbose"] set sizeof_headers [string match "*SIZEOF_HEADERS*" $exec_output] # First test linking a C program. We don't require any libraries. We # link it normally, and objcopy to the S-record format, and then link # directly to the S-record format, and require that the two files # contain the same data. if { ![is_remote host] && [which $CC] == 0 } { untested $test1 untested $test2 return } # Pass -fplt to CC and CXX since -fno-plt doesn't work with S-records # tests. Also add $NOPIE_CFLAGS and $NOPIE_LDFLAGS if PIE doesn't work # with S-records. global PLT_CFLAGS NOPIE_CFLAGS NOPIE_LDFLAGS set old_CC "$CC" set CC "$CC $PLT_CFLAGS $NOPIE_CFLAGS $NOPIE_LDFLAGS" set old_CXX "$CXX" set CXX "$CXX $PLT_CFLAGS $NOPIE_CFLAGS $NOPIE_LDFLAGS" if { ![ld_compile $CC $srcdir/$subdir/sr1.c tmpdir/sr1.o] \ || ![ld_compile $CC $srcdir/$subdir/sr2.c tmpdir/sr2.o] } { unresolved $test1 unresolved $test2 set CC "$old_CC" set CXX "$old_CXX" return } # The i386-aout target is confused: the linker does not put the # sections where objdump finds them. I don't know which is wrong. setup_xfail "i*86-*-aout*" # These tests fail on the native MIPS ELF targets because the GP value # in the .reginfo section is not updated when the S-record version is # written out. The mips-elf target itself does not use a .reginfo section. setup_xfail "mips*-*-irix5*" "mips*-*-irix6*" "mips*-*-linux*" # The S-record linker doesn't do the magic TOC handling that XCOFF # linkers do. setup_xfail "*-*-aix*" "*-*-xcoff*" # The S-record linker is not supported for ARC. setup_xfail "arc*-*-*" # The S-record linker doesn't build ARM/Thumb stubs. setup_xfail "arm-*-coff" setup_xfail "arm-*-pe*" # setup_xfail "arm-*elf*" setup_xfail "arm*-*-linux*" # The S-record linker doesn't include the .{zda} sections. setup_xfail "v850*-*-elf" # The S-record linker doesn't handle Alpha Elf relaxation. setup_xfail "alpha*-*-elf*" "alpha*-*-linux-*" "alpha*-*-gnu*" setup_xfail "alpha*-*-netbsd*" # The S-record linker hasn't any hope of coping with HPPA relocs. # Or MeP complex relocs. setup_xfail "hppa*-*-*" "mep-*-*" # The S-record linker doesn't handle IA64 Elf relaxation. setup_xfail "ia64-*-*" # The S-record linker doesn't support the special PE headers - the PE # emulation tries to write pe-specific information to the PE headers # in the output bfd, but it's not a PE bfd (it's an srec bfd) setup_xfail "*-*-cygwin*" "*-*-mingw*" "*-*-pe*" "*-*-winnt*" setup_xfail "score-*-*" # The S-record linker doesn't support Blackfin ELF FDPIC ABI. setup_xfail "bfin-*-linux-uclibc" # On tile, we appear to be getting some random-seeming zeroing or 24-bit # rightshifts (!) in the output when directly generating S-records from # the linker. Not clear what could be causing this but we don't # anticipate creating s-records (and could always use objcopy to # generate the format if need be). setup_xfail "tile*-*-*" run_srec_test $test1 "tmpdir/sr1.o tmpdir/sr2.o" # Now try linking a C++ program with global constructors and # destructors. Note that since we are not linking against any # libraries, this program won't actually work or anything. if { ![is_remote host] && [which $CXX] == 0 } { untested $test2 set CC "$old_CC" set CXX "$old_CXX" return } if ![ld_compile "$CXX $CXXFLAGS -fno-exceptions" $srcdir/$subdir/sr3.cc tmpdir/sr3.o] { unresolved $test2 set CC "$old_CC" set CXX "$old_CXX" return } # See above. setup_xfail "i*86-*-aout*" setup_xfail "mips*-*-irix5*" "mips*-*-irix6*" "mips*-*-linux*" setup_xfail "*-*-aix*" "*-*-xcoff*" setup_xfail "arc*-*-*" setup_xfail "arm*-*-*" setup_xfail "v850*-*-elf" setup_xfail "alpha*-*-elf*" "alpha*-*-linux-*" "alpha*-*-gnu*" setup_xfail "alpha*-*-netbsd*" setup_xfail "hppa*-*-*" "mep-*-*" setup_xfail "ia64-*-*" setup_xfail "*-*-cygwin*" "*-*-mingw*" "*-*-pe*" "*-*-winnt*" setup_xfail "score-*-*" setup_xfail "bfin-*-linux-uclibc" setup_xfail "tile*-*-*" run_srec_test $test2 "tmpdir/sr3.o" set CC "$old_CC" set CXX "$old_CXX"