x86: Adjust UEFI header size

The UEFI GenFw program inserts headers ahead of the code in the UEFI
binary.  The linker script adjusts the starting address of the .text
section to account for that.  This prevents the symbols from being
perturbed.  This patch accounts for a recent change in the size of the
headers added by the GenFw program.
This commit is contained in:
Michael LeMay 2016-03-21 17:13:36 -07:00
parent 40f81a98c3
commit b0de416682

View File

@ -37,20 +37,20 @@ SECTIONS {
OS-Dev Wiki says it is common for kernels to start at 1M. Addresses before that
are used by BIOS/EFI, the bootloader and memory-mapped I/O.
The UEFI GenFw program inserts a 0x240-byte offset between the image base and
The UEFI GenFw program inserts a 0x220-byte offset between the image base and
the .text section. We add that same offset here to align the symbols in the
UEFI DLL with those in the final UEFI binary to make debugging easier. We also
apply 32-byte alignments to sections rather than more conventional 4K-byte
alignments to avoid symbols being shifted from the intermediate DLL to the
final UEFI image as would occur if the GenFw program shifted the .text section
from a higher, 4K-aligned offset to the 0x240-byte offset from the image base.
from a higher, 4K-aligned offset to the 0x220-byte offset from the image base.
Such shifting may make debugging more difficult by preventing the DLL from
being a directly-useful source of symbol information. The debugging symbols
are not included in the final UEFI image. The GenFw program uses a minimum
section alignment of 32 bytes, so smaller alignment granularities may also
result in symbol perturbation.
*/
. = 1M + 0x240;
. = 1M + 0x220;
.text ALIGN (32) :
{