For conformance to ISO C the stdbool.h header has to provide
the macro __bool_true_false_are_defined (defined to 1). Yep,
that name is really in the standard.
*** UNCONDITIONALLY ***
Esp. sihce tinycc winapi headers are not as complete as people might
expect this can otherwise lead to obscure problems that are difficult
to debug.
(Originally 'warn_implicit_function_declaration' was set to 1
always for windows but someone must have deleted that line)
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 provides a simple implementation of alloca for ARM (and enables
the associated testcase). As tcc for ARM doesn't contain an assembler,
we'll have to resort using gcc for compiling it.
These relocations are used to express a dependency on a certain
symbol (e.g. for EABIs exception handling to the
__aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr{0,1,2} routines). Just ignore them in
reloc processing.
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).
When output is memory we applied the correct GOT offset for certain
relocations (e.g. _GOT32), but we forgot to actually fill the got
entries with the final symbol values, so unconditionally create relocs
against .got as well.
This makes it so that the first PT_LOAD segment covers
ELF and program header and .interp (contained in the same page anyway,
right before the start of the first loaded section). binutils
strip creates invalid output otherwise (which strictly is a binutils
bug, but let's be nice anyway).
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.
TinyCC miscompiled
void g(int,...);
void f(void)
{
char b[4000];
g(1, 2, 3, 4, b);
}
in two ways:
1. It didn't align the stack to 8 bytes before the call
2. It added sizeof(b) to the stack pointer after the call
For program manipulating argv or arge as pointer with construct such as:
(while *argv++) {
do_something_with_argv;
}
it is necessary to have argv and arge inside a region. This patch create
regions argv and arge) if main is declared with those parameters.
As was pointed out on tinycc-devel, many uses of get_tok_str gives as
second parameter the value NULL. However, that pointer was
unconditionally dereferenced in get_tok_ptr. This commit explicitely add
support for thas case.
I found the problem it was because CValue stack variables have rubish as it inital values
and assigning to a member that is smaller than the big union item and trying to
recover it later as a different member gives bak garbage.
ST_FUNC void vset(TCCState* tcc_state, CType *type, int r, int v)
{
CValue cval;
memset(&cval, 0, sizeof(CValue));
cval.i = v; //,<<<<<<<<<<< here is the main bug that mix with garbage
vsetc(tcc_state, type, r, &cval);
}
/* store a value or an expression directly in global data or in local array */
static void init_putv(TCCState* tcc_state, CType *type, Section *sec, unsigned long c,
int v, int expr_type)
{
...
case VT_PTR:
if (tcc_state->tccgen_vtop->r & VT_SYM) {
greloc(tcc_state, sec, tcc_state->tccgen_vtop->sym, c, R_DATA_PTR);
}
//<<< on the next line is where we try to get the assigned value to cvalue.i as cvalue.ull
*(addr_t *)ptr |= (tcc_state->tccgen_vtop->c.ull & bit_mask) << bit_pos;
break;
Also this patch makes vla tests pass on linux 32 bits
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.
Some symbol (such as __gmon_start__ but this one does not matter to tcc)
can have both a R_386_GOT32 and R_386_PLT32 relocation. It is thus not
enough to test if a GOT reloc was already done when deciding whether to
return early from put_got_entry.
For ARM target, tcc uses the soft float ABI when not asked to use hard
float ABI. This means machine without a VFP co-processor generate code
that they cannot run. This commit add a warning for such cases.
When bound check is enabled, tcc tries to relocate a call to
__bound_init in _init. This means that relocation (in tcc_add_bcheck)
must be done after libtcc1.a (which countains __bound_init) is loaded
but before crtn.o is loaded as this finalize _init.