Same as with x86_64, disable the runtime_plt_and_got hack
for -run on arm as well. For that we need to handle several
relocations as (potentially) generating PLT slots as well.
Tested with mpfr-3.1.2 and gawk (both using --disable-shared),
there are two resp. five pre-existing problems, so no regressions.
This also works toward enabling real shared libs for arm,
but it's not there yet.
This makes us use the normal PLT/GOT codepaths also for -run,
which formerly used an on-the-side blob for the jump tables.
For x86_64 only for now, arm coming up.
This was going wrong (case TOK_LAND in unary: computed labels)
- vset(&s->type, VT_CONST | VT_SYM, 0);
- vtop->sym = s;
This does the right thing and is shorter:
+ vpushsym(&s->type, s);
Test case was:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int x;
static void *label_return = &&lbl_return;
printf("label_return = %p\n", label_return);
goto *label_return; //<<<<< here segfault on linux X86_64 without the memset on vset
printf("unreachable\n");
lbl_return:
return 0;
}
Also::
- Rename "void* CValue.ptr" to more usable "addr_t ptr_offset"
and start to use it in obvious cases.
- use __attribute__ ((noreturn)) only with gnu compiler
- Revert CValue memsets ("After several days searching ...")
commit 4bc83ac393
Doesn't mean that the vsetX/vpush thingy isn't brittle and
there still might be bugs as to differences in how the CValue
union was set and is then interpreted later on.
However the big memset hammer was just too slow (-3% overall).
This correctly resolves local references to global functions from
shared libs to their PLT slot (instead of directly to the target
symbol), so that interposition works.
This is still not 100% conforming (executables don't export symbols
that are also defined in linked shared libs, as they must), but
normal shared lib situations work.
Introduce a new attribute to check the existence of a PLT entry for a
given symbol has the presence of an entry for that symbol in the dynsym
section is not proof that a PLT entry exists.
This fixes commit dc8ea93b13.
When checking for exact compatibility between types (such as in
__builtin_types_compatible_p) consider the case of default signedness to
be incompatible with both of the explicit signedness for char. That is,
char is incompatible with signed char *and* unsigned char, no matter
what the default signedness for char is.
Refactoring (no logical changes):
- use memcpy in tccgen.c:ieee_finite(double d)
- use union to store attribute flags in Sym
Makefile: "CFLAGS+=-fno-strict-aliasing" basically not necessary
anymore but I left it for now because gcc sometimes behaves
unexpectedly without.
Also:
- configure: back to mode 100755
- tcc.h: remove unused variables tdata/tbss_section
- x86_64-gen.c: adjust gfunc_sret for prototype
- tccgen: error out for cast to void, as in
void foo(void) { return 1; }
This avoids an assertion failure in x86_64-gen.c, also.
also fix tests2/03_struct.c accordingly
- Error: "memory full" - be more specific
- Makefiles: remove circular dependencies, lookup tcctest.c from VPATH
- tcc.h: cleanup lib, include, crt and libgcc search paths"
avoid duplication or trailing slashes with no CONFIG_MULTIARCHDIR
(as from 9382d6f1a0)
- tcc.h: remove ";{B}" from PE search path
in ce5e12c2f9 James Lyon wrote:
"... I'm not sure this is the right way to fix this problem."
And the answer is: No, please. (copying libtcc1.a for tests instead)
- win32/build_tcc.bat: do not move away a versioned file
The procedure calling standard for ARM architecture mandate the use of
the base standard for variadic function. Therefore, hgen float aggregate
must be returned via stack when greater than 4 bytes and via core
registers else in case of variadic function.
This patch improve gfunc_sret() to take into account whether the
function is variadic or not and make use of gfunc_sret() return value to
determine whether to pass a structure via stack in gfunc_prolog(). It
also take advantage of knowing if a function is variadic or not move
float result value from VFP register to core register in gfunc_epilog().
Commit 9382d6f1 ("Fix lib, include, crt and libgcc search paths",
07-09-2013) inadvertently included an initial empty entry to the
CONFIG_TCC_SYSINCLUDEPATHS variable (for non win32 targets). In
addition to an empty line in the 'tcc -vv' display, this leads
to the preprocessor attempting to read an include file from the
root of the filesystem (i.e. '/header.h').
Signed-off-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsay1.demon.co.uk>
Use one more bit in AttributeDef to differenciate between declared
function (only its prototype is known) and defined function (its body is
also known). This allows to generate an error in cases like:
int f(){return 0;}
int f(){return 1;}
- Use runtime function for conversion
- Also initialize fp with tcc -run on windows
This fixes a bug where
double x = 1.0;
double y = 1.0000000000000001;
double z = x < y ? 0 : sqrt (x*x - y*y);
caused a bad sqrt because rounding precision for the x < y comparison
was different to the one used within the sqrt function.
This also fixes a bug where
printf("%d, %d", (int)pow(10, 2), (int)pow(10, 2));
would print
100, 99
Unrelated:
win32: document relative include & lib lookup
win32: normalize_slashes: do not mirror silly gcc behavior
This reverts part of commit 8a81f9e103
winapi: add missing WINAPI decl. for some functions
VLA storage is now freed when it goes out of scope. This makes it
possible to use a VLA inside a loop without consuming an unlimited
amount of memory.
Combining VLAs with alloca() should work as in GCC - when a VLA is
freed, memory allocated by alloca() after the VLA was created is also
freed. There are some exceptions to this rule when using goto: if a VLA
is in scope at the goto, jumping to a label will reset the stack pointer
to where it was immediately after the last VLA was created prior to the
label, or to what it was before the first VLA was created if the label
is outside the scope of any VLA. This means that in some cases combining
alloca() and VLAs will free alloca() memory where GCC would not.
All tests pass. I think I've caught all the cases assuming only XMM0 is
used. I expect that Win64 is horribly broken by this point though,
because I haven't altered it to cope with XMM1.
There are probably still issues on x86-64 I've missed.
I've added a few new tests to abitest, which fail (2x long long and 2x double
in a struct should be passed in registers).
abitest now passes; however test1-3 fail in init_test. All other tests
pass. I need to re-test Win32 and Linux-x86.
I've added a dummy implementation of gfunc_sret to c67-gen.c so it
should now compile, and I think it should behave as before I created
gfunc_sret.
I expect that Linux-x86 is probably fine. All other architectures
except ARM are definitely broken since I haven't yet implemented
gfunc_sret for these, although replicating the current behaviour
should be straightforward.
Only one test so far, which fails on Windows (with MinGW as the native
compiler - I've tested the MinGW output against MSVC and it appears the
two are compatible).
I've also had to modify tcc.h so that tcc_set_lib_path can point to the
directory containing libtcc1.a on Windows to make the libtcc dependent
tests work. I'm not sure this is the right way to fix this problem.
- except for CONFIG_SYSROOT and CONFIG_TCCDIR
Strictly neccessary it is only for CONFIG_MULTIARCHDIR
because otherwise if it's in config.h it is impossible to
leave it undefined.
But it is also nicer not to use these definitions for
cross-compilers.
- Also:
lib/Makefile : include ../Makefile for CFLAGS
lib/libtcc1.c : fix an issue compiling tcc with tcc on x64
- add quotes: eval opt=\"$opt\"
- use $source_path/conftest.c for OOT build
- add fn_makelink() for OOT build
- do not check lddir etc. on Windows/MSYS
- formatting
config-print.c
- rename to conftest.c (for consistency)
- change option e to b
- change output from that from "yes" to "no"
- remove inttypes.h dependency
- simpify version output
Makefile:
- improve GCC warning flag checks
tcc.h:
- add back default CONFIG_LDDIR
- add default CONFIG_TCCDIR also (just for fun)
tccpp.c:
- fix Christian's last warning
tccpp.c: In function ‘macro_subst’:
tccpp.c:2803:12: warning: ‘*((void *)&cval+4)’ is used uninitialized
in this function [-Wuninitialized]
That the change fixes the warning doesn't make sense but anyway.
libtcc.c:
- tcc_error/warning: print correct source filename/line for
token :paste: (also inline :asm:)
lddir and multiarch logic still needs fixing.
This replaces -> use instead:
-----------------------------------
- tcc_set_linker -> tcc_set_options(s, "-Wl,...");
- tcc_set_warning -> tcc_set_options(s, "-W...");
- tcc_enable_debug -> tcc_set_options(s, "-g");
parse_args is moved to libtcc.c (now tcc_parse_args).
Also some cleanups:
- reorder TCCState members
- add some comments here and there
- do not use argv's directly, make string copies
- use const char* in tcc_set_linker
- tccpe: use fd instead of fp
tested with -D MEM_DEBUG: 0 bytes left
tests/Makefile:
- print-search-dirs when 'hello' fails
- split off hello-run
win32/include/_mingw.h:
- fix for compatibility with mingw headers
(While our headers in win32 are from mingw-64 and don't have
the problem)
tiny_libmaker:
- don't use "dangerous" mktemp
Should fix some warnings wrt. access out of array bounds.
tccelf.c: fix "static function unused" warning
x86_64-gen.c: fix "ctype.ref uninitialzed" warning and cleanup
tcc-win32.txt: remove obsolete limitation notes.
Also:
- fix "make tcc_p" (profiling version)
- remove old gcc flags:
-mpreferred-stack-boundary=2 -march=i386 -falign-functions=0
- remove test "hello" for Darwin (cannot compile to file)
This reverts commit 63193d1794.
Had some problems (_STATIC_ASSERT) and was too ugly anyway.
For retry, I'd suggest to implement a general function
static inline void memswap (void *p1, void* p2, size_t n);
and then use that. If you do so, please keep the original code
as comment.
This replaces commit 3d409b0889
- revert old fix in libtcc.c
- #include_next: look up the file in the include stack to see
if it is already included.
Also:
- streamline include code
- remove 'type' from struct CachedInclude (obsolete because we check
full filename anyway)
- remove inc_type & inc_filename from struct Bufferedfile (obsolete)
- fix bug with TOK_FLAG_ENDIF not being reset
- unrelated: get rid of an 'variable potentially uninitialized' warning
Hello up there. On the list Grischka made a point that we can't recommend using
-b as long as tcc -b tcc.c doesn't produce anything useful. Now it does, so
please don't treat -b mode as second class citizen anymore.
Thanks,
Kirill
* bcheck2:
tests: Add tests for compile/run tcc.c with `tcc -b` then compile tcc.c again, then run tcctest.c
lib/bcheck: Fix code typo in __bound_delete_region()
lib/bcheck: Don't assume heap goes right after bss
Make tcc work after self-compiling with bounds-check enabled