2001-06-19 H.J. Lu <hjl@gnu.org>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / ld / ld.texinfo
1 \input texinfo
2 @setfilename ld.info
3 @c Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
4 @c 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @syncodeindex ky cp
6 @include configdoc.texi
7 @c (configdoc.texi is generated by the Makefile)
8 @include ldver.texi
9
10 @c @smallbook
11
12 @c man begin NAME
13 @ifset man
14 @c Configure for the generation of man pages
15 @set UsesEnvVars
16 @set GENERIC
17 @set A29K
18 @set ARC
19 @set ARM
20 @set D10V
21 @set D30V
22 @set H8/300
23 @set H8/500
24 @set HPPA
25 @set I370
26 @set I80386
27 @set I860
28 @set I960
29 @set M32R
30 @set M68HC11
31 @set M680X0
32 @set MCORE
33 @set MIPS
34 @set PDP11
35 @set PJ
36 @set SH
37 @set SPARC
38 @set C54X
39 @set V850
40 @set VAX
41 @end ifset
42 @c man end
43
44 @ifinfo
45 @format
46 START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
47 * Ld: (ld). The GNU linker.
48 END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
49 @end format
50 @end ifinfo
51
52 @ifinfo
53 This file documents the @sc{gnu} linker LD version @value{VERSION}.
54
55 Copyright (C) 1991, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
56
57 @ignore
58
59 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
60 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
61 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
62 with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no
63 Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
64 section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".
65
66 Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
67 results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
68 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
69 (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
70
71 @end ignore
72 @end ifinfo
73 @iftex
74 @finalout
75 @setchapternewpage odd
76 @settitle Using LD, the GNU linker
77 @titlepage
78 @title Using ld
79 @subtitle The GNU linker
80 @sp 1
81 @subtitle @code{ld} version 2
82 @subtitle Version @value{VERSION}
83 @author Steve Chamberlain
84 @author Ian Lance Taylor
85 @page
86
87 @tex
88 {\parskip=0pt
89 \hfill Red Hat Inc\par
90 \hfill nickc\@credhat.com, doc\@redhat.com\par
91 \hfill {\it Using LD, the GNU linker}\par
92 \hfill Edited by Jeffrey Osier (jeffrey\@cygnus.com)\par
93 }
94 \global\parindent=0pt % Steve likes it this way.
95 @end tex
96
97 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
98 @c man begin COPYRIGHT
99 Copyright @copyright{} 1991, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
100
101 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
102 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
103 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
104 with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no
105 Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
106 section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".
107 @c man end
108
109 @end titlepage
110 @end iftex
111 @c FIXME: Talk about importance of *order* of args, cmds to linker!
112
113 @ifinfo
114 @node Top
115 @top Using ld
116 This file documents the @sc{gnu} linker ld version @value{VERSION}.
117
118 This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free
119 Documentation License. A copy of the license is included in the
120 section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".
121
122 @menu
123 * Overview:: Overview
124 * Invocation:: Invocation
125 * Scripts:: Linker Scripts
126 @ifset GENERIC
127 * Machine Dependent:: Machine Dependent Features
128 @end ifset
129 @ifclear GENERIC
130 @ifset H8300
131 * H8/300:: ld and the H8/300
132 @end ifset
133 @ifset Hitachi
134 * Hitachi:: ld and other Hitachi micros
135 @end ifset
136 @ifset I960
137 * i960:: ld and the Intel 960 family
138 @end ifset
139 @ifset TICOFF
140 * TI COFF:: ld and the TI COFF
141 @end ifset
142 @end ifclear
143 @ifclear SingleFormat
144 * BFD:: BFD
145 @end ifclear
146 @c Following blank line required for remaining bug in makeinfo conds/menus
147
148 * Reporting Bugs:: Reporting Bugs
149 * MRI:: MRI Compatible Script Files
150 * GNU Free Documentation License:: GNU Free Documentation License
151 * Index:: Index
152 @end menu
153 @end ifinfo
154
155 @node Overview
156 @chapter Overview
157
158 @cindex @sc{gnu} linker
159 @cindex what is this?
160
161 @ifset man
162 @c man begin SYNOPSIS
163 ld [ options ] objfile...
164 @c man end
165
166 @c man begin SEEALSO
167 ar(1), nm(1), objcopy(1), objdump(1), readelf(1) and
168 the Info entries for @file{binutils} and
169 @file{ld}.
170 @c man end
171 @end ifset
172
173 @c man begin DESCRIPTION
174
175 @code{ld} combines a number of object and archive files, relocates
176 their data and ties up symbol references. Usually the last step in
177 compiling a program is to run @code{ld}.
178
179 @code{ld} accepts Linker Command Language files written in
180 a superset of AT&T's Link Editor Command Language syntax,
181 to provide explicit and total control over the linking process.
182
183 @ifset man
184 @c For the man only
185 This man page does not describe the command language; see the
186 @code{ld} entry in @code{info}, or the manual
187 ld: the GNU linker, for full details on the command language and
188 on other aspects of the GNU linker.
189 @end ifset
190
191 @ifclear SingleFormat
192 This version of @code{ld} uses the general purpose BFD libraries
193 to operate on object files. This allows @code{ld} to read, combine, and
194 write object files in many different formats---for example, COFF or
195 @code{a.out}. Different formats may be linked together to produce any
196 available kind of object file. @xref{BFD}, for more information.
197 @end ifclear
198
199 Aside from its flexibility, the @sc{gnu} linker is more helpful than other
200 linkers in providing diagnostic information. Many linkers abandon
201 execution immediately upon encountering an error; whenever possible,
202 @code{ld} continues executing, allowing you to identify other errors
203 (or, in some cases, to get an output file in spite of the error).
204
205 @c man end
206
207 @node Invocation
208 @chapter Invocation
209
210 @c man begin DESCRIPTION
211
212 The @sc{gnu} linker @code{ld} is meant to cover a broad range of situations,
213 and to be as compatible as possible with other linkers. As a result,
214 you have many choices to control its behavior.
215
216 @c man end
217
218 @ifset UsesEnvVars
219 @menu
220 * Options:: Command Line Options
221 * Environment:: Environment Variables
222 @end menu
223
224 @node Options
225 @section Command Line Options
226 @end ifset
227
228 @cindex command line
229 @cindex options
230
231 @c man begin OPTIONS
232
233 The linker supports a plethora of command-line options, but in actual
234 practice few of them are used in any particular context.
235 @cindex standard Unix system
236 For instance, a frequent use of @code{ld} is to link standard Unix
237 object files on a standard, supported Unix system. On such a system, to
238 link a file @code{hello.o}:
239
240 @smallexample
241 ld -o @var{output} /lib/crt0.o hello.o -lc
242 @end smallexample
243
244 This tells @code{ld} to produce a file called @var{output} as the
245 result of linking the file @code{/lib/crt0.o} with @code{hello.o} and
246 the library @code{libc.a}, which will come from the standard search
247 directories. (See the discussion of the @samp{-l} option below.)
248
249 Some of the command-line options to @code{ld} may be specified at any
250 point in the command line. However, options which refer to files, such
251 as @samp{-l} or @samp{-T}, cause the file to be read at the point at
252 which the option appears in the command line, relative to the object
253 files and other file options. Repeating non-file options with a
254 different argument will either have no further effect, or override prior
255 occurrences (those further to the left on the command line) of that
256 option. Options which may be meaningfully specified more than once are
257 noted in the descriptions below.
258
259 @cindex object files
260 Non-option arguments are object files or archives which are to be linked
261 together. They may follow, precede, or be mixed in with command-line
262 options, except that an object file argument may not be placed between
263 an option and its argument.
264
265 Usually the linker is invoked with at least one object file, but you can
266 specify other forms of binary input files using @samp{-l}, @samp{-R},
267 and the script command language. If @emph{no} binary input files at all
268 are specified, the linker does not produce any output, and issues the
269 message @samp{No input files}.
270
271 If the linker can not recognize the format of an object file, it will
272 assume that it is a linker script. A script specified in this way
273 augments the main linker script used for the link (either the default
274 linker script or the one specified by using @samp{-T}). This feature
275 permits the linker to link against a file which appears to be an object
276 or an archive, but actually merely defines some symbol values, or uses
277 @code{INPUT} or @code{GROUP} to load other objects. Note that
278 specifying a script in this way should only be used to augment the main
279 linker script; if you want to use some command that logically can only
280 appear once, such as the @code{SECTIONS} or @code{MEMORY} command, you
281 must replace the default linker script using the @samp{-T} option.
282 @xref{Scripts}.
283
284 For options whose names are a single letter,
285 option arguments must either follow the option letter without intervening
286 whitespace, or be given as separate arguments immediately following the
287 option that requires them.
288
289 For options whose names are multiple letters, either one dash or two can
290 precede the option name; for example, @samp{-trace-symbol} and
291 @samp{--trace-symbol} are equivalent. Note - there is one exception to
292 this rule. Multiple letter options that start with a lower case 'o' can
293 only be preceeded by two dashes. This is to reduce confusion with the
294 @samp{-o} option. So for example @samp{-omagic} sets the output file
295 name to @samp{magic} whereas @samp{--omagic} sets the NMAGIC flag on the
296 output.
297
298 Arguments to multiple-letter options must either be separated from the
299 option name by an equals sign, or be given as separate arguments
300 immediately following the option that requires them. For example,
301 @samp{--trace-symbol foo} and @samp{--trace-symbol=foo} are equivalent.
302 Unique abbreviations of the names of multiple-letter options are
303 accepted.
304
305 Note - if the linker is being invoked indirectly, via a compiler driver
306 (eg @samp{gcc}) then all the linker command line options should be
307 prefixed by @samp{-Wl,} (or whatever is appropriate for the particular
308 compiler driver) like this:
309
310 @smallexample
311 gcc -Wl,--startgroup foo.o bar.o -Wl,--endgroup
312 @end smallexample
313
314 This is important, because otherwise the compiler driver program may
315 silently drop the linker options, resulting in a bad link.
316
317 Here is a table of the generic command line switches accepted by the GNU
318 linker:
319
320 @table @code
321 @kindex -a@var{keyword}
322 @item -a@var{keyword}
323 This option is supported for HP/UX compatibility. The @var{keyword}
324 argument must be one of the strings @samp{archive}, @samp{shared}, or
325 @samp{default}. @samp{-aarchive} is functionally equivalent to
326 @samp{-Bstatic}, and the other two keywords are functionally equivalent
327 to @samp{-Bdynamic}. This option may be used any number of times.
328
329 @ifset I960
330 @cindex architectures
331 @kindex -A@var{arch}
332 @item -A@var{architecture}
333 @kindex --architecture=@var{arch}
334 @itemx --architecture=@var{architecture}
335 In the current release of @code{ld}, this option is useful only for the
336 Intel 960 family of architectures. In that @code{ld} configuration, the
337 @var{architecture} argument identifies the particular architecture in
338 the 960 family, enabling some safeguards and modifying the
339 archive-library search path. @xref{i960,,@code{ld} and the Intel 960
340 family}, for details.
341
342 Future releases of @code{ld} may support similar functionality for
343 other architecture families.
344 @end ifset
345
346 @ifclear SingleFormat
347 @cindex binary input format
348 @kindex -b @var{format}
349 @kindex --format=@var{format}
350 @cindex input format
351 @cindex input format
352 @item -b @var{input-format}
353 @itemx --format=@var{input-format}
354 @code{ld} may be configured to support more than one kind of object
355 file. If your @code{ld} is configured this way, you can use the
356 @samp{-b} option to specify the binary format for input object files
357 that follow this option on the command line. Even when @code{ld} is
358 configured to support alternative object formats, you don't usually need
359 to specify this, as @code{ld} should be configured to expect as a
360 default input format the most usual format on each machine.
361 @var{input-format} is a text string, the name of a particular format
362 supported by the BFD libraries. (You can list the available binary
363 formats with @samp{objdump -i}.)
364 @xref{BFD}.
365
366 You may want to use this option if you are linking files with an unusual
367 binary format. You can also use @samp{-b} to switch formats explicitly (when
368 linking object files of different formats), by including
369 @samp{-b @var{input-format}} before each group of object files in a
370 particular format.
371
372 The default format is taken from the environment variable
373 @code{GNUTARGET}.
374 @ifset UsesEnvVars
375 @xref{Environment}.
376 @end ifset
377 You can also define the input format from a script, using the command
378 @code{TARGET};
379 @ifclear man
380 see @ref{Format Commands}.
381 @end ifclear
382 @end ifclear
383
384 @kindex -c @var{MRI-cmdfile}
385 @kindex --mri-script=@var{MRI-cmdfile}
386 @cindex compatibility, MRI
387 @item -c @var{MRI-commandfile}
388 @itemx --mri-script=@var{MRI-commandfile}
389 For compatibility with linkers produced by MRI, @code{ld} accepts script
390 files written in an alternate, restricted command language, described in
391 @ifclear man
392 @ref{MRI,,MRI Compatible Script Files}.
393 @end ifclear
394 @ifset man
395 the MRI Compatible Script Files section of GNU ld documentation.
396 @end ifset
397 Introduce MRI script files with
398 the option @samp{-c}; use the @samp{-T} option to run linker
399 scripts written in the general-purpose @code{ld} scripting language.
400 If @var{MRI-cmdfile} does not exist, @code{ld} looks for it in the directories
401 specified by any @samp{-L} options.
402
403 @cindex common allocation
404 @kindex -d
405 @kindex -dc
406 @kindex -dp
407 @item -d
408 @itemx -dc
409 @itemx -dp
410 These three options are equivalent; multiple forms are supported for
411 compatibility with other linkers. They assign space to common symbols
412 even if a relocatable output file is specified (with @samp{-r}). The
413 script command @code{FORCE_COMMON_ALLOCATION} has the same effect.
414 @xref{Miscellaneous Commands}.
415
416 @cindex entry point, from command line
417 @kindex -e @var{entry}
418 @kindex --entry=@var{entry}
419 @item -e @var{entry}
420 @itemx --entry=@var{entry}
421 Use @var{entry} as the explicit symbol for beginning execution of your
422 program, rather than the default entry point. If there is no symbol
423 named @var{entry}, the linker will try to parse @var{entry} as a number,
424 and use that as the entry address (the number will be interpreted in
425 base 10; you may use a leading @samp{0x} for base 16, or a leading
426 @samp{0} for base 8). @xref{Entry Point}, for a discussion of defaults
427 and other ways of specifying the entry point.
428
429 @cindex dynamic symbol table
430 @kindex -E
431 @kindex --export-dynamic
432 @item -E
433 @itemx --export-dynamic
434 When creating a dynamically linked executable, add all symbols to the
435 dynamic symbol table. The dynamic symbol table is the set of symbols
436 which are visible from dynamic objects at run time.
437
438 If you do not use this option, the dynamic symbol table will normally
439 contain only those symbols which are referenced by some dynamic object
440 mentioned in the link.
441
442 If you use @code{dlopen} to load a dynamic object which needs to refer
443 back to the symbols defined by the program, rather than some other
444 dynamic object, then you will probably need to use this option when
445 linking the program itself.
446
447 You can also use the version script to control what symbols should
448 be added to the dynamic symbol table if the output format supports it.
449 See the description of @samp{--version-script} in @ref{VERSION}.
450
451 @cindex big-endian objects
452 @cindex endianness
453 @kindex -EB
454 @item -EB
455 Link big-endian objects. This affects the default output format.
456
457 @cindex little-endian objects
458 @kindex -EL
459 @item -EL
460 Link little-endian objects. This affects the default output format.
461
462 @kindex -f
463 @kindex --auxiliary
464 @item -f
465 @itemx --auxiliary @var{name}
466 When creating an ELF shared object, set the internal DT_AUXILIARY field
467 to the specified name. This tells the dynamic linker that the symbol
468 table of the shared object should be used as an auxiliary filter on the
469 symbol table of the shared object @var{name}.
470
471 If you later link a program against this filter object, then, when you
472 run the program, the dynamic linker will see the DT_AUXILIARY field. If
473 the dynamic linker resolves any symbols from the filter object, it will
474 first check whether there is a definition in the shared object
475 @var{name}. If there is one, it will be used instead of the definition
476 in the filter object. The shared object @var{name} need not exist.
477 Thus the shared object @var{name} may be used to provide an alternative
478 implementation of certain functions, perhaps for debugging or for
479 machine specific performance.
480
481 This option may be specified more than once. The DT_AUXILIARY entries
482 will be created in the order in which they appear on the command line.
483
484 @kindex -F
485 @kindex --filter
486 @item -F @var{name}
487 @itemx --filter @var{name}
488 When creating an ELF shared object, set the internal DT_FILTER field to
489 the specified name. This tells the dynamic linker that the symbol table
490 of the shared object which is being created should be used as a filter
491 on the symbol table of the shared object @var{name}.
492
493 If you later link a program against this filter object, then, when you
494 run the program, the dynamic linker will see the DT_FILTER field. The
495 dynamic linker will resolve symbols according to the symbol table of the
496 filter object as usual, but it will actually link to the definitions
497 found in the shared object @var{name}. Thus the filter object can be
498 used to select a subset of the symbols provided by the object
499 @var{name}.
500
501 Some older linkers used the @code{-F} option throughout a compilation
502 toolchain for specifying object-file format for both input and output
503 object files. The @sc{gnu} linker uses other mechanisms for this
504 purpose: the @code{-b}, @code{--format}, @code{--oformat} options, the
505 @code{TARGET} command in linker scripts, and the @code{GNUTARGET}
506 environment variable. The @sc{gnu} linker will ignore the @code{-F}
507 option when not creating an ELF shared object.
508
509 @cindex finalization function
510 @kindex -fini
511 @item -fini @var{name}
512 When creating an ELF executable or shared object, call NAME when the
513 executable or shared object is unloaded, by setting DT_FINI to the
514 address of the function. By default, the linker uses @code{_fini} as
515 the function to call.
516
517 @kindex -g
518 @item -g
519 Ignored. Provided for compatibility with other tools.
520
521 @kindex -G
522 @kindex --gpsize
523 @cindex object size
524 @item -G@var{value}
525 @itemx --gpsize=@var{value}
526 Set the maximum size of objects to be optimized using the GP register to
527 @var{size}. This is only meaningful for object file formats such as
528 MIPS ECOFF which supports putting large and small objects into different
529 sections. This is ignored for other object file formats.
530
531 @cindex runtime library name
532 @kindex -h@var{name}
533 @kindex -soname=@var{name}
534 @item -h@var{name}
535 @itemx -soname=@var{name}
536 When creating an ELF shared object, set the internal DT_SONAME field to
537 the specified name. When an executable is linked with a shared object
538 which has a DT_SONAME field, then when the executable is run the dynamic
539 linker will attempt to load the shared object specified by the DT_SONAME
540 field rather than the using the file name given to the linker.
541
542 @kindex -i
543 @cindex incremental link
544 @item -i
545 Perform an incremental link (same as option @samp{-r}).
546
547 @cindex initialization function
548 @kindex -init
549 @item -init @var{name}
550 When creating an ELF executable or shared object, call NAME when the
551 executable or shared object is loaded, by setting DT_INIT to the address
552 of the function. By default, the linker uses @code{_init} as the
553 function to call.
554
555 @cindex archive files, from cmd line
556 @kindex -l@var{archive}
557 @kindex --library=@var{archive}
558 @item -l@var{archive}
559 @itemx --library=@var{archive}
560 Add archive file @var{archive} to the list of files to link. This
561 option may be used any number of times. @code{ld} will search its
562 path-list for occurrences of @code{lib@var{archive}.a} for every
563 @var{archive} specified.
564
565 On systems which support shared libraries, @code{ld} may also search for
566 libraries with extensions other than @code{.a}. Specifically, on ELF
567 and SunOS systems, @code{ld} will search a directory for a library with
568 an extension of @code{.so} before searching for one with an extension of
569 @code{.a}. By convention, a @code{.so} extension indicates a shared
570 library.
571
572 The linker will search an archive only once, at the location where it is
573 specified on the command line. If the archive defines a symbol which
574 was undefined in some object which appeared before the archive on the
575 command line, the linker will include the appropriate file(s) from the
576 archive. However, an undefined symbol in an object appearing later on
577 the command line will not cause the linker to search the archive again.
578
579 See the @code{-(} option for a way to force the linker to search
580 archives multiple times.
581
582 You may list the same archive multiple times on the command line.
583
584 @ifset GENERIC
585 This type of archive searching is standard for Unix linkers. However,
586 if you are using @code{ld} on AIX, note that it is different from the
587 behaviour of the AIX linker.
588 @end ifset
589
590 @cindex search directory, from cmd line
591 @kindex -L@var{dir}
592 @kindex --library-path=@var{dir}
593 @item -L@var{searchdir}
594 @itemx --library-path=@var{searchdir}
595 Add path @var{searchdir} to the list of paths that @code{ld} will search
596 for archive libraries and @code{ld} control scripts. You may use this
597 option any number of times. The directories are searched in the order
598 in which they are specified on the command line. Directories specified
599 on the command line are searched before the default directories. All
600 @code{-L} options apply to all @code{-l} options, regardless of the
601 order in which the options appear.
602
603 @ifset UsesEnvVars
604 The default set of paths searched (without being specified with
605 @samp{-L}) depends on which emulation mode @code{ld} is using, and in
606 some cases also on how it was configured. @xref{Environment}.
607 @end ifset
608
609 The paths can also be specified in a link script with the
610 @code{SEARCH_DIR} command. Directories specified this way are searched
611 at the point in which the linker script appears in the command line.
612
613 @cindex emulation
614 @kindex -m @var{emulation}
615 @item -m@var{emulation}
616 Emulate the @var{emulation} linker. You can list the available
617 emulations with the @samp{--verbose} or @samp{-V} options.
618
619 If the @samp{-m} option is not used, the emulation is taken from the
620 @code{LDEMULATION} environment variable, if that is defined.
621
622 Otherwise, the default emulation depends upon how the linker was
623 configured.
624
625 @cindex link map
626 @kindex -M
627 @kindex --print-map
628 @item -M
629 @itemx --print-map
630 Print a link map to the standard output. A link map provides
631 information about the link, including the following:
632
633 @itemize @bullet
634 @item
635 Where object files and symbols are mapped into memory.
636 @item
637 How common symbols are allocated.
638 @item
639 All archive members included in the link, with a mention of the symbol
640 which caused the archive member to be brought in.
641 @end itemize
642
643 @kindex -n
644 @cindex read-only text
645 @cindex NMAGIC
646 @kindex --nmagic
647 @item -n
648 @itemx --nmagic
649 Turn off page alignment of sections, and mark the output as
650 @code{NMAGIC} if possible.
651
652 @kindex -N
653 @kindex --omagic
654 @cindex read/write from cmd line
655 @cindex OMAGIC
656 @item -N
657 @itemx --omagic
658 Set the text and data sections to be readable and writable. Also, do
659 not page-align the data segment. If the output format supports Unix
660 style magic numbers, mark the output as @code{OMAGIC}.
661
662 @kindex -o @var{output}
663 @kindex --output=@var{output}
664 @cindex naming the output file
665 @item -o @var{output}
666 @itemx --output=@var{output}
667 Use @var{output} as the name for the program produced by @code{ld}; if this
668 option is not specified, the name @file{a.out} is used by default. The
669 script command @code{OUTPUT} can also specify the output file name.
670
671 @kindex -O @var{level}
672 @cindex generating optimized output
673 @item -O @var{level}
674 If @var{level} is a numeric values greater than zero @code{ld} optimizes
675 the output. This might take significantly longer and therefore probably
676 should only be enabled for the final binary.
677
678 @kindex -q
679 @kindex --emit-relocs
680 @cindex retain relocations in final executable
681 @item -q
682 @itemx --emit-relocs
683 Leave relocation sections and contents in fully linked exececutables.
684 Post link analysis and optimization tools may need this information in
685 order to perform correct modifications of executables. This results
686 in larger executables.
687
688 @cindex partial link
689 @cindex relocatable output
690 @kindex -r
691 @kindex --relocateable
692 @item -r
693 @itemx --relocateable
694 Generate relocatable output---i.e., generate an output file that can in
695 turn serve as input to @code{ld}. This is often called @dfn{partial
696 linking}. As a side effect, in environments that support standard Unix
697 magic numbers, this option also sets the output file's magic number to
698 @code{OMAGIC}.
699 @c ; see @code{-N}.
700 If this option is not specified, an absolute file is produced. When
701 linking C++ programs, this option @emph{will not} resolve references to
702 constructors; to do that, use @samp{-Ur}.
703
704 This option does the same thing as @samp{-i}.
705
706 @kindex -R @var{file}
707 @kindex --just-symbols=@var{file}
708 @cindex symbol-only input
709 @item -R @var{filename}
710 @itemx --just-symbols=@var{filename}
711 Read symbol names and their addresses from @var{filename}, but do not
712 relocate it or include it in the output. This allows your output file
713 to refer symbolically to absolute locations of memory defined in other
714 programs. You may use this option more than once.
715
716 For compatibility with other ELF linkers, if the @code{-R} option is
717 followed by a directory name, rather than a file name, it is treated as
718 the @code{-rpath} option.
719
720 @kindex -s
721 @kindex --strip-all
722 @cindex strip all symbols
723 @item -s
724 @itemx --strip-all
725 Omit all symbol information from the output file.
726
727 @kindex -S
728 @kindex --strip-debug
729 @cindex strip debugger symbols
730 @item -S
731 @itemx --strip-debug
732 Omit debugger symbol information (but not all symbols) from the output file.
733
734 @kindex -t
735 @kindex --trace
736 @cindex input files, displaying
737 @item -t
738 @itemx --trace
739 Print the names of the input files as @code{ld} processes them.
740
741 @kindex -T @var{script}
742 @kindex --script=@var{script}
743 @cindex script files
744 @item -T @var{scriptfile}
745 @itemx --script=@var{scriptfile}
746 Use @var{scriptfile} as the linker script. This script replaces
747 @code{ld}'s default linker script (rather than adding to it), so
748 @var{commandfile} must specify everything necessary to describe the
749 output file. You must use this option if you want to use a command
750 which can only appear once in a linker script, such as the
751 @code{SECTIONS} or @code{MEMORY} command. @xref{Scripts}. If
752 @var{scriptfile} does not exist in the current directory, @code{ld}
753 looks for it in the directories specified by any preceding @samp{-L}
754 options. Multiple @samp{-T} options accumulate.
755
756 @kindex -u @var{symbol}
757 @kindex --undefined=@var{symbol}
758 @cindex undefined symbol
759 @item -u @var{symbol}
760 @itemx --undefined=@var{symbol}
761 Force @var{symbol} to be entered in the output file as an undefined
762 symbol. Doing this may, for example, trigger linking of additional
763 modules from standard libraries. @samp{-u} may be repeated with
764 different option arguments to enter additional undefined symbols. This
765 option is equivalent to the @code{EXTERN} linker script command.
766
767 @kindex -Ur
768 @cindex constructors
769 @item -Ur
770 For anything other than C++ programs, this option is equivalent to
771 @samp{-r}: it generates relocatable output---i.e., an output file that can in
772 turn serve as input to @code{ld}. When linking C++ programs, @samp{-Ur}
773 @emph{does} resolve references to constructors, unlike @samp{-r}.
774 It does not work to use @samp{-Ur} on files that were themselves linked
775 with @samp{-Ur}; once the constructor table has been built, it cannot
776 be added to. Use @samp{-Ur} only for the last partial link, and
777 @samp{-r} for the others.
778
779 @kindex --unique[=@var{SECTION}]
780 @item --unique[=@var{SECTION}]
781 Creates a separate output section for every input section matching
782 @var{SECTION}, or if the optional wildcard @var{SECTION} argument is
783 missing, for every orphan input section. An orphan section is one not
784 specifically mentioned in a linker script. You may use this option
785 multiple times on the command line; It prevents the normal merging of
786 input sections with the same name, overriding output section assignments
787 in a linker script.
788
789 @kindex -v
790 @kindex -V
791 @kindex --version
792 @cindex version
793 @item -v
794 @itemx --version
795 @itemx -V
796 Display the version number for @code{ld}. The @code{-V} option also
797 lists the supported emulations.
798
799 @kindex -x
800 @kindex --discard-all
801 @cindex deleting local symbols
802 @item -x
803 @itemx --discard-all
804 Delete all local symbols.
805
806 @kindex -X
807 @kindex --discard-locals
808 @cindex local symbols, deleting
809 @cindex L, deleting symbols beginning
810 @item -X
811 @itemx --discard-locals
812 Delete all temporary local symbols. For most targets, this is all local
813 symbols whose names begin with @samp{L}.
814
815 @kindex -y @var{symbol}
816 @kindex --trace-symbol=@var{symbol}
817 @cindex symbol tracing
818 @item -y @var{symbol}
819 @itemx --trace-symbol=@var{symbol}
820 Print the name of each linked file in which @var{symbol} appears. This
821 option may be given any number of times. On many systems it is necessary
822 to prepend an underscore.
823
824 This option is useful when you have an undefined symbol in your link but
825 don't know where the reference is coming from.
826
827 @kindex -Y @var{path}
828 @item -Y @var{path}
829 Add @var{path} to the default library search path. This option exists
830 for Solaris compatibility.
831
832 @kindex -z @var{keyword}
833 @item -z @var{keyword}
834 The recognized keywords are @code{initfirst}, @code{interpose},
835 @code{loadfltr}, @code{nodefaultlib}, @code{nodelete}, @code{nodlopen},
836 @code{nodump}, @code{now} and @code{origin}. The other keywords are
837 ignored for Solaris compatibility. @code{initfirst} marks the object
838 to be initialized first at runtime before any other objects.
839 @code{interpose} marks the object that its symbol table interposes
840 before all symbols but the primary executable. @code{loadfltr} marks
841 the object that its filtees be processed immediately at runtime.
842 @code{nodefaultlib} marks the object that the search for dependencies
843 of this object will ignore any default library search paths.
844 @code{nodelete} marks the object shouldn't be unloaded at runtime.
845 @code{nodlopen} marks the object not available to @code{dlopen}.
846 @code{nodump} marks the object can not be dumped by @code{dldump}.
847 @code{now} marks the object with the non-lazy runtime binding.
848 @code{origin} marks the object may contain $ORIGIN.
849 @code{defs} disallows undefined symbols.
850
851 @kindex -(
852 @cindex groups of archives
853 @item -( @var{archives} -)
854 @itemx --start-group @var{archives} --end-group
855 The @var{archives} should be a list of archive files. They may be
856 either explicit file names, or @samp{-l} options.
857
858 The specified archives are searched repeatedly until no new undefined
859 references are created. Normally, an archive is searched only once in
860 the order that it is specified on the command line. If a symbol in that
861 archive is needed to resolve an undefined symbol referred to by an
862 object in an archive that appears later on the command line, the linker
863 would not be able to resolve that reference. By grouping the archives,
864 they all be searched repeatedly until all possible references are
865 resolved.
866
867 Using this option has a significant performance cost. It is best to use
868 it only when there are unavoidable circular references between two or
869 more archives.
870
871 @kindex -assert @var{keyword}
872 @item -assert @var{keyword}
873 This option is ignored for SunOS compatibility.
874
875 @kindex -Bdynamic
876 @kindex -dy
877 @kindex -call_shared
878 @item -Bdynamic
879 @itemx -dy
880 @itemx -call_shared
881 Link against dynamic libraries. This is only meaningful on platforms
882 for which shared libraries are supported. This option is normally the
883 default on such platforms. The different variants of this option are
884 for compatibility with various systems. You may use this option
885 multiple times on the command line: it affects library searching for
886 @code{-l} options which follow it.
887
888 @kindex -Bgroup
889 @item -Bgroup
890 Set the @code{DF_1_GROUP} flag in the @code{DT_FLAGS_1} entry in the dynamic
891 section. This causes the runtime linker to handle lookups in this
892 object and its dependencies to be performed only inside the group.
893 @code{--no-undefined} is implied. This option is only meaningful on ELF
894 platforms which support shared libraries.
895
896 @kindex -Bstatic
897 @kindex -dn
898 @kindex -non_shared
899 @kindex -static
900 @item -Bstatic
901 @itemx -dn
902 @itemx -non_shared
903 @itemx -static
904 Do not link against shared libraries. This is only meaningful on
905 platforms for which shared libraries are supported. The different
906 variants of this option are for compatibility with various systems. You
907 may use this option multiple times on the command line: it affects
908 library searching for @code{-l} options which follow it.
909
910 @kindex -Bsymbolic
911 @item -Bsymbolic
912 When creating a shared library, bind references to global symbols to the
913 definition within the shared library, if any. Normally, it is possible
914 for a program linked against a shared library to override the definition
915 within the shared library. This option is only meaningful on ELF
916 platforms which support shared libraries.
917
918 @kindex --check-sections
919 @kindex --no-check-sections
920 @item --check-sections
921 @itemx --no-check-sections
922 Asks the linker @emph{not} to check section addresses after they have
923 been assigned to see if there any overlaps. Normally the linker will
924 perform this check, and if it finds any overlaps it will produce
925 suitable error messages. The linker does know about, and does make
926 allowances for sections in overlays. The default behaviour can be
927 restored by using the command line switch @samp{--check-sections}.
928
929 @cindex cross reference table
930 @kindex --cref
931 @item --cref
932 Output a cross reference table. If a linker map file is being
933 generated, the cross reference table is printed to the map file.
934 Otherwise, it is printed on the standard output.
935
936 The format of the table is intentionally simple, so that it may be
937 easily processed by a script if necessary. The symbols are printed out,
938 sorted by name. For each symbol, a list of file names is given. If the
939 symbol is defined, the first file listed is the location of the
940 definition. The remaining files contain references to the symbol.
941
942 @cindex symbols, from command line
943 @kindex --defsym @var{symbol}=@var{exp}
944 @item --defsym @var{symbol}=@var{expression}
945 Create a global symbol in the output file, containing the absolute
946 address given by @var{expression}. You may use this option as many
947 times as necessary to define multiple symbols in the command line. A
948 limited form of arithmetic is supported for the @var{expression} in this
949 context: you may give a hexadecimal constant or the name of an existing
950 symbol, or use @code{+} and @code{-} to add or subtract hexadecimal
951 constants or symbols. If you need more elaborate expressions, consider
952 using the linker command language from a script (@pxref{Assignments,,
953 Assignment: Symbol Definitions}). @emph{Note:} there should be no white
954 space between @var{symbol}, the equals sign (``@key{=}''), and
955 @var{expression}.
956
957 @cindex demangling, from command line
958 @kindex --demangle[=@var{style}]
959 @kindex --no-demangle
960 @item --demangle[=@var{style}]
961 @itemx --no-demangle
962 These options control whether to demangle symbol names in error messages
963 and other output. When the linker is told to demangle, it tries to
964 present symbol names in a readable fashion: it strips leading
965 underscores if they are used by the object file format, and converts C++
966 mangled symbol names into user readable names. Different compilers have
967 different mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used
968 to choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. The linker will
969 demangle by default unless the environment variable @samp{COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE}
970 is set. These options may be used to override the default.
971
972 @cindex dynamic linker, from command line
973 @kindex -I@var{file}
974 @kindex --dynamic-linker @var{file}
975 @item --dynamic-linker @var{file}
976 Set the name of the dynamic linker. This is only meaningful when
977 generating dynamically linked ELF executables. The default dynamic
978 linker is normally correct; don't use this unless you know what you are
979 doing.
980
981 @cindex MIPS embedded PIC code
982 @kindex --embedded-relocs
983 @item --embedded-relocs
984 This option is only meaningful when linking MIPS embedded PIC code,
985 generated by the -membedded-pic option to the @sc{gnu} compiler and
986 assembler. It causes the linker to create a table which may be used at
987 runtime to relocate any data which was statically initialized to pointer
988 values. See the code in testsuite/ld-empic for details.
989
990
991 @kindex --fatal-warnings
992 @item --fatal-warnings
993 Treat all warnings as errors.
994
995 @kindex --force-exe-suffix
996 @item --force-exe-suffix
997 Make sure that an output file has a .exe suffix.
998
999 If a successfully built fully linked output file does not have a
1000 @code{.exe} or @code{.dll} suffix, this option forces the linker to copy
1001 the output file to one of the same name with a @code{.exe} suffix. This
1002 option is useful when using unmodified Unix makefiles on a Microsoft
1003 Windows host, since some versions of Windows won't run an image unless
1004 it ends in a @code{.exe} suffix.
1005
1006 @kindex --gc-sections
1007 @kindex --no-gc-sections
1008 @cindex garbage collection
1009 @item --no-gc-sections
1010 @itemx --gc-sections
1011 Enable garbage collection of unused input sections. It is ignored on
1012 targets that do not support this option. This option is not compatible
1013 with @samp{-r}, nor should it be used with dynamic linking. The default
1014 behaviour (of not performing this garbage collection) can be restored by
1015 specifying @samp{--no-gc-sections} on the command line.
1016
1017 @cindex help
1018 @cindex usage
1019 @kindex --help
1020 @item --help
1021 Print a summary of the command-line options on the standard output and exit.
1022
1023 @kindex --target-help
1024 @item --target-help
1025 Print a summary of all target specific options on the standard output and exit.
1026
1027 @kindex -Map
1028 @item -Map @var{mapfile}
1029 Print a link map to the file @var{mapfile}. See the description of the
1030 @samp{-M} option, above.
1031
1032 @cindex memory usage
1033 @kindex --no-keep-memory
1034 @item --no-keep-memory
1035 @code{ld} normally optimizes for speed over memory usage by caching the
1036 symbol tables of input files in memory. This option tells @code{ld} to
1037 instead optimize for memory usage, by rereading the symbol tables as
1038 necessary. This may be required if @code{ld} runs out of memory space
1039 while linking a large executable.
1040
1041 @kindex --no-undefined
1042 @kindex -z defs
1043 @item --no-undefined
1044 @itemx -z defs
1045 Normally when creating a non-symbolic shared library, undefined symbols
1046 are allowed and left to be resolved by the runtime loader. These options
1047 disallows such undefined symbols.
1048
1049 @kindex --allow-shlib-undefined
1050 @item --allow-shlib-undefined
1051 Allow undefined symbols in shared objects even when --no-undefined is
1052 set. The net result will be that undefined symbols in regular objects
1053 will still trigger an error, but undefined symbols in shared objects
1054 will be ignored. The implementation of no_undefined makes the
1055 assumption that the runtime linker will choke on undefined symbols.
1056 However there is at least one system (BeOS) where undefined symbols in
1057 shared libraries is normal since the kernel patches them at load time to
1058 select which function is most appropriate for the current architecture.
1059 I.E. dynamically select an appropriate memset function. Apparently it
1060 is also normal for HPPA shared libraries to have undefined symbols.
1061
1062 @kindex --no-warn-mismatch
1063 @item --no-warn-mismatch
1064 Normally @code{ld} will give an error if you try to link together input
1065 files that are mismatched for some reason, perhaps because they have
1066 been compiled for different processors or for different endiannesses.
1067 This option tells @code{ld} that it should silently permit such possible
1068 errors. This option should only be used with care, in cases when you
1069 have taken some special action that ensures that the linker errors are
1070 inappropriate.
1071
1072 @kindex --no-whole-archive
1073 @item --no-whole-archive
1074 Turn off the effect of the @code{--whole-archive} option for subsequent
1075 archive files.
1076
1077 @cindex output file after errors
1078 @kindex --noinhibit-exec
1079 @item --noinhibit-exec
1080 Retain the executable output file whenever it is still usable.
1081 Normally, the linker will not produce an output file if it encounters
1082 errors during the link process; it exits without writing an output file
1083 when it issues any error whatsoever.
1084
1085 @ifclear SingleFormat
1086 @kindex --oformat
1087 @item --oformat @var{output-format}
1088 @code{ld} may be configured to support more than one kind of object
1089 file. If your @code{ld} is configured this way, you can use the
1090 @samp{--oformat} option to specify the binary format for the output
1091 object file. Even when @code{ld} is configured to support alternative
1092 object formats, you don't usually need to specify this, as @code{ld}
1093 should be configured to produce as a default output format the most
1094 usual format on each machine. @var{output-format} is a text string, the
1095 name of a particular format supported by the BFD libraries. (You can
1096 list the available binary formats with @samp{objdump -i}.) The script
1097 command @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT} can also specify the output format, but
1098 this option overrides it. @xref{BFD}.
1099 @end ifclear
1100
1101 @kindex -qmagic
1102 @item -qmagic
1103 This option is ignored for Linux compatibility.
1104
1105 @kindex -Qy
1106 @item -Qy
1107 This option is ignored for SVR4 compatibility.
1108
1109 @kindex --relax
1110 @cindex synthesizing linker
1111 @cindex relaxing addressing modes
1112 @item --relax
1113 An option with machine dependent effects.
1114 @ifset GENERIC
1115 This option is only supported on a few targets.
1116 @end ifset
1117 @ifset H8300
1118 @xref{H8/300,,@code{ld} and the H8/300}.
1119 @end ifset
1120 @ifset I960
1121 @xref{i960,, @code{ld} and the Intel 960 family}.
1122 @end ifset
1123
1124
1125 On some platforms, the @samp{--relax} option performs global
1126 optimizations that become possible when the linker resolves addressing
1127 in the program, such as relaxing address modes and synthesizing new
1128 instructions in the output object file.
1129
1130 On some platforms these link time global optimizations may make symbolic
1131 debugging of the resulting executable impossible.
1132 @ifset GENERIC
1133 This is known to be
1134 the case for the Matsushita MN10200 and MN10300 family of processors.
1135 @end ifset
1136
1137 @ifset GENERIC
1138 On platforms where this is not supported, @samp{--relax} is accepted,
1139 but ignored.
1140 @end ifset
1141
1142 @cindex retaining specified symbols
1143 @cindex stripping all but some symbols
1144 @cindex symbols, retaining selectively
1145 @item --retain-symbols-file @var{filename}
1146 Retain @emph{only} the symbols listed in the file @var{filename},
1147 discarding all others. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one
1148 symbol name per line. This option is especially useful in environments
1149 @ifset GENERIC
1150 (such as VxWorks)
1151 @end ifset
1152 where a large global symbol table is accumulated gradually, to conserve
1153 run-time memory.
1154
1155 @samp{--retain-symbols-file} does @emph{not} discard undefined symbols,
1156 or symbols needed for relocations.
1157
1158 You may only specify @samp{--retain-symbols-file} once in the command
1159 line. It overrides @samp{-s} and @samp{-S}.
1160
1161 @ifset GENERIC
1162 @item -rpath @var{dir}
1163 @cindex runtime library search path
1164 @kindex -rpath
1165 Add a directory to the runtime library search path. This is used when
1166 linking an ELF executable with shared objects. All @code{-rpath}
1167 arguments are concatenated and passed to the runtime linker, which uses
1168 them to locate shared objects at runtime. The @code{-rpath} option is
1169 also used when locating shared objects which are needed by shared
1170 objects explicitly included in the link; see the description of the
1171 @code{-rpath-link} option. If @code{-rpath} is not used when linking an
1172 ELF executable, the contents of the environment variable
1173 @code{LD_RUN_PATH} will be used if it is defined.
1174
1175 The @code{-rpath} option may also be used on SunOS. By default, on
1176 SunOS, the linker will form a runtime search patch out of all the
1177 @code{-L} options it is given. If a @code{-rpath} option is used, the
1178 runtime search path will be formed exclusively using the @code{-rpath}
1179 options, ignoring the @code{-L} options. This can be useful when using
1180 gcc, which adds many @code{-L} options which may be on NFS mounted
1181 filesystems.
1182
1183 For compatibility with other ELF linkers, if the @code{-R} option is
1184 followed by a directory name, rather than a file name, it is treated as
1185 the @code{-rpath} option.
1186 @end ifset
1187
1188 @ifset GENERIC
1189 @cindex link-time runtime library search path
1190 @kindex -rpath-link
1191 @item -rpath-link @var{DIR}
1192 When using ELF or SunOS, one shared library may require another. This
1193 happens when an @code{ld -shared} link includes a shared library as one
1194 of the input files.
1195
1196 When the linker encounters such a dependency when doing a non-shared,
1197 non-relocatable link, it will automatically try to locate the required
1198 shared library and include it in the link, if it is not included
1199 explicitly. In such a case, the @code{-rpath-link} option
1200 specifies the first set of directories to search. The
1201 @code{-rpath-link} option may specify a sequence of directory names
1202 either by specifying a list of names separated by colons, or by
1203 appearing multiple times.
1204
1205 This option should be used with caution as it overrides the search path
1206 that may have been hard compiled into a shared library. In such a case it
1207 is possible to use unintentionally a different search path than the
1208 runtime linker would do.
1209
1210 The linker uses the following search paths to locate required shared
1211 libraries.
1212 @enumerate
1213 @item
1214 Any directories specified by @code{-rpath-link} options.
1215 @item
1216 Any directories specified by @code{-rpath} options. The difference
1217 between @code{-rpath} and @code{-rpath-link} is that directories
1218 specified by @code{-rpath} options are included in the executable and
1219 used at runtime, whereas the @code{-rpath-link} option is only effective
1220 at link time. It is for the native linker only.
1221 @item
1222 On an ELF system, if the @code{-rpath} and @code{rpath-link} options
1223 were not used, search the contents of the environment variable
1224 @code{LD_RUN_PATH}. It is for the native linker only.
1225 @item
1226 On SunOS, if the @code{-rpath} option was not used, search any
1227 directories specified using @code{-L} options.
1228 @item
1229 For a native linker, the contents of the environment variable
1230 @code{LD_LIBRARY_PATH}.
1231 @item
1232 For a native ELF linker, the directories in @code{DT_RUNPATH} or
1233 @code{DT_RPATH} of a shared library are searched for shared
1234 libraries needed by it. The @code{DT_RPATH} entries are ignored if
1235 @code{DT_RUNPATH} entries exist.
1236 @item
1237 The default directories, normally @file{/lib} and @file{/usr/lib}.
1238 @item
1239 For a native linker on an ELF system, if the file @file{/etc/ld.so.conf}
1240 exists, the list of directories found in that file.
1241 @end enumerate
1242
1243 If the required shared library is not found, the linker will issue a
1244 warning and continue with the link.
1245 @end ifset
1246
1247 @kindex -shared
1248 @kindex -Bshareable
1249 @item -shared
1250 @itemx -Bshareable
1251 @cindex shared libraries
1252 Create a shared library. This is currently only supported on ELF, XCOFF
1253 and SunOS platforms. On SunOS, the linker will automatically create a
1254 shared library if the @code{-e} option is not used and there are
1255 undefined symbols in the link.
1256
1257 @item --sort-common
1258 @kindex --sort-common
1259 This option tells @code{ld} to sort the common symbols by size when it
1260 places them in the appropriate output sections. First come all the one
1261 byte symbols, then all the two bytes, then all the four bytes, and then
1262 everything else. This is to prevent gaps between symbols due to
1263 alignment constraints.
1264
1265 @kindex --split-by-file
1266 @item --split-by-file [@var{size}]
1267 Similar to @code{--split-by-reloc} but creates a new output section for
1268 each input file when @var{size} is reached. @var{size} defaults to a
1269 size of 1 if not given.
1270
1271 @kindex --split-by-reloc
1272 @item --split-by-reloc [@var{count}]
1273 Tries to creates extra sections in the output file so that no single
1274 output section in the file contains more than @var{count} relocations.
1275 This is useful when generating huge relocatable files for downloading into
1276 certain real time kernels with the COFF object file format; since COFF
1277 cannot represent more than 65535 relocations in a single section. Note
1278 that this will fail to work with object file formats which do not
1279 support arbitrary sections. The linker will not split up individual
1280 input sections for redistribution, so if a single input section contains
1281 more than @var{count} relocations one output section will contain that
1282 many relocations. @var{count} defaults to a value of 32768.
1283
1284 @kindex --stats
1285 @item --stats
1286 Compute and display statistics about the operation of the linker, such
1287 as execution time and memory usage.
1288
1289 @kindex --traditional-format
1290 @cindex traditional format
1291 @item --traditional-format
1292 For some targets, the output of @code{ld} is different in some ways from
1293 the output of some existing linker. This switch requests @code{ld} to
1294 use the traditional format instead.
1295
1296 @cindex dbx
1297 For example, on SunOS, @code{ld} combines duplicate entries in the
1298 symbol string table. This can reduce the size of an output file with
1299 full debugging information by over 30 percent. Unfortunately, the SunOS
1300 @code{dbx} program can not read the resulting program (@code{gdb} has no
1301 trouble). The @samp{--traditional-format} switch tells @code{ld} to not
1302 combine duplicate entries.
1303
1304 @kindex --section-start @var{sectionname}=@var{org}
1305 @item --section-start @var{sectionname}=@var{org}
1306 Locate a section in the output file at the absolute
1307 address given by @var{org}. You may use this option as many
1308 times as necessary to locate multiple sections in the command
1309 line.
1310 @var{org} must be a single hexadecimal integer;
1311 for compatibility with other linkers, you may omit the leading
1312 @samp{0x} usually associated with hexadecimal values. @emph{Note:} there
1313 should be no white space between @var{sectionname}, the equals
1314 sign (``@key{=}''), and @var{org}.
1315
1316 @kindex -Tbss @var{org}
1317 @kindex -Tdata @var{org}
1318 @kindex -Ttext @var{org}
1319 @cindex segment origins, cmd line
1320 @item -Tbss @var{org}
1321 @itemx -Tdata @var{org}
1322 @itemx -Ttext @var{org}
1323 Use @var{org} as the starting address for---respectively---the
1324 @code{bss}, @code{data}, or the @code{text} segment of the output file.
1325 @var{org} must be a single hexadecimal integer;
1326 for compatibility with other linkers, you may omit the leading
1327 @samp{0x} usually associated with hexadecimal values.
1328
1329 @kindex --verbose
1330 @cindex verbose
1331 @item --dll-verbose
1332 @itemx --verbose
1333 Display the version number for @code{ld} and list the linker emulations
1334 supported. Display which input files can and cannot be opened. Display
1335 the linker script if using a default builtin script.
1336
1337 @kindex --version-script=@var{version-scriptfile}
1338 @cindex version script, symbol versions
1339 @itemx --version-script=@var{version-scriptfile}
1340 Specify the name of a version script to the linker. This is typically
1341 used when creating shared libraries to specify additional information
1342 about the version heirarchy for the library being created. This option
1343 is only meaningful on ELF platforms which support shared libraries.
1344 @xref{VERSION}.
1345
1346 @kindex --warn-common
1347 @cindex warnings, on combining symbols
1348 @cindex combining symbols, warnings on
1349 @item --warn-common
1350 Warn when a common symbol is combined with another common symbol or with
1351 a symbol definition. Unix linkers allow this somewhat sloppy practice,
1352 but linkers on some other operating systems do not. This option allows
1353 you to find potential problems from combining global symbols.
1354 Unfortunately, some C libraries use this practice, so you may get some
1355 warnings about symbols in the libraries as well as in your programs.
1356
1357 There are three kinds of global symbols, illustrated here by C examples:
1358
1359 @table @samp
1360 @item int i = 1;
1361 A definition, which goes in the initialized data section of the output
1362 file.
1363
1364 @item extern int i;
1365 An undefined reference, which does not allocate space.
1366 There must be either a definition or a common symbol for the
1367 variable somewhere.
1368
1369 @item int i;
1370 A common symbol. If there are only (one or more) common symbols for a
1371 variable, it goes in the uninitialized data area of the output file.
1372 The linker merges multiple common symbols for the same variable into a
1373 single symbol. If they are of different sizes, it picks the largest
1374 size. The linker turns a common symbol into a declaration, if there is
1375 a definition of the same variable.
1376 @end table
1377
1378 The @samp{--warn-common} option can produce five kinds of warnings.
1379 Each warning consists of a pair of lines: the first describes the symbol
1380 just encountered, and the second describes the previous symbol
1381 encountered with the same name. One or both of the two symbols will be
1382 a common symbol.
1383
1384 @enumerate
1385 @item
1386 Turning a common symbol into a reference, because there is already a
1387 definition for the symbol.
1388 @smallexample
1389 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: common of `@var{symbol}'
1390 overridden by definition
1391 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: defined here
1392 @end smallexample
1393
1394 @item
1395 Turning a common symbol into a reference, because a later definition for
1396 the symbol is encountered. This is the same as the previous case,
1397 except that the symbols are encountered in a different order.
1398 @smallexample
1399 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: definition of `@var{symbol}'
1400 overriding common
1401 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: common is here
1402 @end smallexample
1403
1404 @item
1405 Merging a common symbol with a previous same-sized common symbol.
1406 @smallexample
1407 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: multiple common
1408 of `@var{symbol}'
1409 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: previous common is here
1410 @end smallexample
1411
1412 @item
1413 Merging a common symbol with a previous larger common symbol.
1414 @smallexample
1415 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: common of `@var{symbol}'
1416 overridden by larger common
1417 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: larger common is here
1418 @end smallexample
1419
1420 @item
1421 Merging a common symbol with a previous smaller common symbol. This is
1422 the same as the previous case, except that the symbols are
1423 encountered in a different order.
1424 @smallexample
1425 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: common of `@var{symbol}'
1426 overriding smaller common
1427 @var{file}(@var{section}): warning: smaller common is here
1428 @end smallexample
1429 @end enumerate
1430
1431 @kindex --warn-constructors
1432 @item --warn-constructors
1433 Warn if any global constructors are used. This is only useful for a few
1434 object file formats. For formats like COFF or ELF, the linker can not
1435 detect the use of global constructors.
1436
1437 @kindex --warn-multiple-gp
1438 @item --warn-multiple-gp
1439 Warn if multiple global pointer values are required in the output file.
1440 This is only meaningful for certain processors, such as the Alpha.
1441 Specifically, some processors put large-valued constants in a special
1442 section. A special register (the global pointer) points into the middle
1443 of this section, so that constants can be loaded efficiently via a
1444 base-register relative addressing mode. Since the offset in
1445 base-register relative mode is fixed and relatively small (e.g., 16
1446 bits), this limits the maximum size of the constant pool. Thus, in
1447 large programs, it is often necessary to use multiple global pointer
1448 values in order to be able to address all possible constants. This
1449 option causes a warning to be issued whenever this case occurs.
1450
1451 @kindex --warn-once
1452 @cindex warnings, on undefined symbols
1453 @cindex undefined symbols, warnings on
1454 @item --warn-once
1455 Only warn once for each undefined symbol, rather than once per module
1456 which refers to it.
1457
1458 @kindex --warn-section-align
1459 @cindex warnings, on section alignment
1460 @cindex section alignment, warnings on
1461 @item --warn-section-align
1462 Warn if the address of an output section is changed because of
1463 alignment. Typically, the alignment will be set by an input section.
1464 The address will only be changed if it not explicitly specified; that
1465 is, if the @code{SECTIONS} command does not specify a start address for
1466 the section (@pxref{SECTIONS}).
1467
1468 @kindex --whole-archive
1469 @cindex including an entire archive
1470 @item --whole-archive
1471 For each archive mentioned on the command line after the
1472 @code{--whole-archive} option, include every object file in the archive
1473 in the link, rather than searching the archive for the required object
1474 files. This is normally used to turn an archive file into a shared
1475 library, forcing every object to be included in the resulting shared
1476 library. This option may be used more than once.
1477
1478 Two notes when using this option from gcc: First, gcc doesn't know
1479 about this option, so you have to use @code{-Wl,-whole-archive}.
1480 Second, don't forget to use @code{-Wl,-no-whole-archive} after your
1481 list of archives, because gcc will add its own list of archives to
1482 your link and you may not want this flag to affect those as well.
1483
1484 @kindex --wrap
1485 @item --wrap @var{symbol}
1486 Use a wrapper function for @var{symbol}. Any undefined reference to
1487 @var{symbol} will be resolved to @code{__wrap_@var{symbol}}. Any
1488 undefined reference to @code{__real_@var{symbol}} will be resolved to
1489 @var{symbol}.
1490
1491 This can be used to provide a wrapper for a system function. The
1492 wrapper function should be called @code{__wrap_@var{symbol}}. If it
1493 wishes to call the system function, it should call
1494 @code{__real_@var{symbol}}.
1495
1496 Here is a trivial example:
1497
1498 @smallexample
1499 void *
1500 __wrap_malloc (int c)
1501 @{
1502 printf ("malloc called with %ld\n", c);
1503 return __real_malloc (c);
1504 @}
1505 @end smallexample
1506
1507 If you link other code with this file using @code{--wrap malloc}, then
1508 all calls to @code{malloc} will call the function @code{__wrap_malloc}
1509 instead. The call to @code{__real_malloc} in @code{__wrap_malloc} will
1510 call the real @code{malloc} function.
1511
1512 You may wish to provide a @code{__real_malloc} function as well, so that
1513 links without the @code{--wrap} option will succeed. If you do this,
1514 you should not put the definition of @code{__real_malloc} in the same
1515 file as @code{__wrap_malloc}; if you do, the assembler may resolve the
1516 call before the linker has a chance to wrap it to @code{malloc}.
1517
1518 @kindex --enable-new-dtags
1519 @kindex --disable-new-dtags
1520 @item --enable-new-dtags
1521 @itemx --disable-new-dtags
1522 This linker can create the new dynamic tags in ELF. But the older ELF
1523 systems may not understand them. If you specify
1524 @code{--enable-new-dtags}, the dynamic tags will be created as needed.
1525 If you specify @code{--disable-new-dtags}, no new dynamic tags will be
1526 created. By default, the new dynamic tags are not created. Note that
1527 those options are only available for ELF systems.
1528
1529 @end table
1530
1531 @c man end
1532
1533 @subsection Options specific to i386 PE targets
1534
1535 @c man begin OPTIONS
1536
1537 The i386 PE linker supports the @code{-shared} option, which causes
1538 the output to be a dynamically linked library (DLL) instead of a
1539 normal executable. You should name the output @code{*.dll} when you
1540 use this option. In addition, the linker fully supports the standard
1541 @code{*.def} files, which may be specified on the linker command line
1542 like an object file (in fact, it should precede archives it exports
1543 symbols from, to ensure that they get linked in, just like a normal
1544 object file).
1545
1546 In addition to the options common to all targets, the i386 PE linker
1547 support additional command line options that are specific to the i386
1548 PE target. Options that take values may be separated from their
1549 values by either a space or an equals sign.
1550
1551 @table @code
1552
1553 @kindex --add-stdcall-alias
1554 @item --add-stdcall-alias
1555 If given, symbols with a stdcall suffix (@@@var{nn}) will be exported
1556 as-is and also with the suffix stripped.
1557
1558 @kindex --base-file
1559 @item --base-file @var{file}
1560 Use @var{file} as the name of a file in which to save the base
1561 addresses of all the relocations needed for generating DLLs with
1562 @file{dlltool}.
1563
1564 @kindex --dll
1565 @item --dll
1566 Create a DLL instead of a regular executable. You may also use
1567 @code{-shared} or specify a @code{LIBRARY} in a given @code{.def}
1568 file.
1569
1570 @kindex --enable-stdcall-fixup
1571 @kindex --disable-stdcall-fixup
1572 @item --enable-stdcall-fixup
1573 @itemx --disable-stdcall-fixup
1574 If the link finds a symbol that it cannot resolve, it will attempt to
1575 do "fuzzy linking" by looking for another defined symbol that differs
1576 only in the format of the symbol name (cdecl vs stdcall) and will
1577 resolve that symbol by linking to the match. For example, the
1578 undefined symbol @code{_foo} might be linked to the function
1579 @code{_foo@@12}, or the undefined symbol @code{_bar@@16} might be linked
1580 to the function @code{_bar}. When the linker does this, it prints a
1581 warning, since it normally should have failed to link, but sometimes
1582 import libraries generated from third-party dlls may need this feature
1583 to be usable. If you specify @code{--enable-stdcall-fixup}, this
1584 feature is fully enabled and warnings are not printed. If you specify
1585 @code{--disable-stdcall-fixup}, this feature is disabled and such
1586 mismatches are considered to be errors.
1587
1588 @cindex DLLs, creating
1589 @kindex --export-all-symbols
1590 @item --export-all-symbols
1591 If given, all global symbols in the objects used to build a DLL will
1592 be exported by the DLL. Note that this is the default if there
1593 otherwise wouldn't be any exported symbols. When symbols are
1594 explicitly exported via DEF files or implicitly exported via function
1595 attributes, the default is to not export anything else unless this
1596 option is given. Note that the symbols @code{DllMain@@12},
1597 @code{DllEntryPoint@@0}, and @code{impure_ptr} will not be automatically
1598 exported.
1599
1600 @kindex --exclude-symbols
1601 @item --exclude-symbols @var{symbol},@var{symbol},...
1602 Specifies a list of symbols which should not be automatically
1603 exported. The symbol names may be delimited by commas or colons.
1604
1605 @kindex --file-alignment
1606 @item --file-alignment
1607 Specify the file alignment. Sections in the file will always begin at
1608 file offsets which are multiples of this number. This defaults to
1609 512.
1610
1611 @cindex heap size
1612 @kindex --heap
1613 @item --heap @var{reserve}
1614 @itemx --heap @var{reserve},@var{commit}
1615 Specify the amount of memory to reserve (and optionally commit) to be
1616 used as heap for this program. The default is 1Mb reserved, 4K
1617 committed.
1618
1619 @cindex image base
1620 @kindex --image-base
1621 @item --image-base @var{value}
1622 Use @var{value} as the base address of your program or dll. This is
1623 the lowest memory location that will be used when your program or dll
1624 is loaded. To reduce the need to relocate and improve performance of
1625 your dlls, each should have a unique base address and not overlap any
1626 other dlls. The default is 0x400000 for executables, and 0x10000000
1627 for dlls.
1628
1629 @kindex --kill-at
1630 @item --kill-at
1631 If given, the stdcall suffixes (@@@var{nn}) will be stripped from
1632 symbols before they are exported.
1633
1634 @kindex --major-image-version
1635 @item --major-image-version @var{value}
1636 Sets the major number of the "image version". Defaults to 1.
1637
1638 @kindex --major-os-version
1639 @item --major-os-version @var{value}
1640 Sets the major number of the "os version". Defaults to 4.
1641
1642 @kindex --major-subsystem-version
1643 @item --major-subsystem-version @var{value}
1644 Sets the major number of the "subsystem version". Defaults to 4.
1645
1646 @kindex --minor-image-version
1647 @item --minor-image-version @var{value}
1648 Sets the minor number of the "image version". Defaults to 0.
1649
1650 @kindex --minor-os-version
1651 @item --minor-os-version @var{value}
1652 Sets the minor number of the "os version". Defaults to 0.
1653
1654 @kindex --minor-subsystem-version
1655 @item --minor-subsystem-version @var{value}
1656 Sets the minor number of the "subsystem version". Defaults to 0.
1657
1658 @cindex DEF files, creating
1659 @cindex DLLs, creating
1660 @kindex --output-def
1661 @item --output-def @var{file}
1662 The linker will create the file @var{file} which will contain a DEF
1663 file corresponding to the DLL the linker is generating. This DEF file
1664 (which should be called @code{*.def}) may be used to create an import
1665 library with @code{dlltool} or may be used as a reference to
1666 automatically or implicitly exported symbols.
1667
1668 @kindex --section-alignment
1669 @item --section-alignment
1670 Sets the section alignment. Sections in memory will always begin at
1671 addresses which are a multiple of this number. Defaults to 0x1000.
1672
1673 @cindex stack size
1674 @kindex --stack
1675 @item --stack @var{reserve}
1676 @itemx --stack @var{reserve},@var{commit}
1677 Specify the amount of memory to reserve (and optionally commit) to be
1678 used as stack for this program. The default is 32Mb reserved, 4K
1679 committed.
1680
1681 @kindex --subsystem
1682 @item --subsystem @var{which}
1683 @itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major}
1684 @itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major}.@var{minor}
1685 Specifies the subsystem under which your program will execute. The
1686 legal values for @var{which} are @code{native}, @code{windows},
1687 @code{console}, and @code{posix}. You may optionally set the
1688 subsystem version also.
1689
1690 @end table
1691
1692 @c man end
1693
1694 @ifset UsesEnvVars
1695 @node Environment
1696 @section Environment Variables
1697
1698 @c man begin ENVIRONMENT
1699
1700 You can change the behavior of @code{ld} with the environment variables
1701 @code{GNUTARGET}, @code{LDEMULATION}, and @code{COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE}.
1702
1703 @kindex GNUTARGET
1704 @cindex default input format
1705 @code{GNUTARGET} determines the input-file object format if you don't
1706 use @samp{-b} (or its synonym @samp{--format}). Its value should be one
1707 of the BFD names for an input format (@pxref{BFD}). If there is no
1708 @code{GNUTARGET} in the environment, @code{ld} uses the natural format
1709 of the target. If @code{GNUTARGET} is set to @code{default} then BFD
1710 attempts to discover the input format by examining binary input files;
1711 this method often succeeds, but there are potential ambiguities, since
1712 there is no method of ensuring that the magic number used to specify
1713 object-file formats is unique. However, the configuration procedure for
1714 BFD on each system places the conventional format for that system first
1715 in the search-list, so ambiguities are resolved in favor of convention.
1716
1717 @kindex LDEMULATION
1718 @cindex default emulation
1719 @cindex emulation, default
1720 @code{LDEMULATION} determines the default emulation if you don't use the
1721 @samp{-m} option. The emulation can affect various aspects of linker
1722 behaviour, particularly the default linker script. You can list the
1723 available emulations with the @samp{--verbose} or @samp{-V} options. If
1724 the @samp{-m} option is not used, and the @code{LDEMULATION} environment
1725 variable is not defined, the default emulation depends upon how the
1726 linker was configured.
1727
1728 @kindex COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE
1729 @cindex demangling, default
1730 Normally, the linker will default to demangling symbols. However, if
1731 @code{COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE} is set in the environment, then it will
1732 default to not demangling symbols. This environment variable is used in
1733 a similar fashion by the @code{gcc} linker wrapper program. The default
1734 may be overridden by the @samp{--demangle} and @samp{--no-demangle}
1735 options.
1736
1737 @c man end
1738 @end ifset
1739
1740 @node Scripts
1741 @chapter Linker Scripts
1742
1743 @cindex scripts
1744 @cindex linker scripts
1745 @cindex command files
1746 Every link is controlled by a @dfn{linker script}. This script is
1747 written in the linker command language.
1748
1749 The main purpose of the linker script is to describe how the sections in
1750 the input files should be mapped into the output file, and to control
1751 the memory layout of the output file. Most linker scripts do nothing
1752 more than this. However, when necessary, the linker script can also
1753 direct the linker to perform many other operations, using the commands
1754 described below.
1755
1756 The linker always uses a linker script. If you do not supply one
1757 yourself, the linker will use a default script that is compiled into the
1758 linker executable. You can use the @samp{--verbose} command line option
1759 to display the default linker script. Certain command line options,
1760 such as @samp{-r} or @samp{-N}, will affect the default linker script.
1761
1762 You may supply your own linker script by using the @samp{-T} command
1763 line option. When you do this, your linker script will replace the
1764 default linker script.
1765
1766 You may also use linker scripts implicitly by naming them as input files
1767 to the linker, as though they were files to be linked. @xref{Implicit
1768 Linker Scripts}.
1769
1770 @menu
1771 * Basic Script Concepts:: Basic Linker Script Concepts
1772 * Script Format:: Linker Script Format
1773 * Simple Example:: Simple Linker Script Example
1774 * Simple Commands:: Simple Linker Script Commands
1775 * Assignments:: Assigning Values to Symbols
1776 * SECTIONS:: SECTIONS Command
1777 * MEMORY:: MEMORY Command
1778 * PHDRS:: PHDRS Command
1779 * VERSION:: VERSION Command
1780 * Expressions:: Expressions in Linker Scripts
1781 * Implicit Linker Scripts:: Implicit Linker Scripts
1782 @end menu
1783
1784 @node Basic Script Concepts
1785 @section Basic Linker Script Concepts
1786 @cindex linker script concepts
1787 We need to define some basic concepts and vocabulary in order to
1788 describe the linker script language.
1789
1790 The linker combines input files into a single output file. The output
1791 file and each input file are in a special data format known as an
1792 @dfn{object file format}. Each file is called an @dfn{object file}.
1793 The output file is often called an @dfn{executable}, but for our
1794 purposes we will also call it an object file. Each object file has,
1795 among other things, a list of @dfn{sections}. We sometimes refer to a
1796 section in an input file as an @dfn{input section}; similarly, a section
1797 in the output file is an @dfn{output section}.
1798
1799 Each section in an object file has a name and a size. Most sections
1800 also have an associated block of data, known as the @dfn{section
1801 contents}. A section may be marked as @dfn{loadable}, which mean that
1802 the contents should be loaded into memory when the output file is run.
1803 A section with no contents may be @dfn{allocatable}, which means that an
1804 area in memory should be set aside, but nothing in particular should be
1805 loaded there (in some cases this memory must be zeroed out). A section
1806 which is neither loadable nor allocatable typically contains some sort
1807 of debugging information.
1808
1809 Every loadable or allocatable output section has two addresses. The
1810 first is the @dfn{VMA}, or virtual memory address. This is the address
1811 the section will have when the output file is run. The second is the
1812 @dfn{LMA}, or load memory address. This is the address at which the
1813 section will be loaded. In most cases the two addresses will be the
1814 same. An example of when they might be different is when a data section
1815 is loaded into ROM, and then copied into RAM when the program starts up
1816 (this technique is often used to initialize global variables in a ROM
1817 based system). In this case the ROM address would be the LMA, and the
1818 RAM address would be the VMA.
1819
1820 You can see the sections in an object file by using the @code{objdump}
1821 program with the @samp{-h} option.
1822
1823 Every object file also has a list of @dfn{symbols}, known as the
1824 @dfn{symbol table}. A symbol may be defined or undefined. Each symbol
1825 has a name, and each defined symbol has an address, among other
1826 information. If you compile a C or C++ program into an object file, you
1827 will get a defined symbol for every defined function and global or
1828 static variable. Every undefined function or global variable which is
1829 referenced in the input file will become an undefined symbol.
1830
1831 You can see the symbols in an object file by using the @code{nm}
1832 program, or by using the @code{objdump} program with the @samp{-t}
1833 option.
1834
1835 @node Script Format
1836 @section Linker Script Format
1837 @cindex linker script format
1838 Linker scripts are text files.
1839
1840 You write a linker script as a series of commands. Each command is
1841 either a keyword, possibly followed by arguments, or an assignment to a
1842 symbol. You may separate commands using semicolons. Whitespace is
1843 generally ignored.
1844
1845 Strings such as file or format names can normally be entered directly.
1846 If the file name contains a character such as a comma which would
1847 otherwise serve to separate file names, you may put the file name in
1848 double quotes. There is no way to use a double quote character in a
1849 file name.
1850
1851 You may include comments in linker scripts just as in C, delimited by
1852 @samp{/*} and @samp{*/}. As in C, comments are syntactically equivalent
1853 to whitespace.
1854
1855 @node Simple Example
1856 @section Simple Linker Script Example
1857 @cindex linker script example
1858 @cindex example of linker script
1859 Many linker scripts are fairly simple.
1860
1861 The simplest possible linker script has just one command:
1862 @samp{SECTIONS}. You use the @samp{SECTIONS} command to describe the
1863 memory layout of the output file.
1864
1865 The @samp{SECTIONS} command is a powerful command. Here we will
1866 describe a simple use of it. Let's assume your program consists only of
1867 code, initialized data, and uninitialized data. These will be in the
1868 @samp{.text}, @samp{.data}, and @samp{.bss} sections, respectively.
1869 Let's assume further that these are the only sections which appear in
1870 your input files.
1871
1872 For this example, let's say that the code should be loaded at address
1873 0x10000, and that the data should start at address 0x8000000. Here is a
1874 linker script which will do that:
1875 @smallexample
1876 SECTIONS
1877 @{
1878 . = 0x10000;
1879 .text : @{ *(.text) @}
1880 . = 0x8000000;
1881 .data : @{ *(.data) @}
1882 .bss : @{ *(.bss) @}
1883 @}
1884 @end smallexample
1885
1886 You write the @samp{SECTIONS} command as the keyword @samp{SECTIONS},
1887 followed by a series of symbol assignments and output section
1888 descriptions enclosed in curly braces.
1889
1890 The first line inside the @samp{SECTIONS} command of the above example
1891 sets the value of the special symbol @samp{.}, which is the location
1892 counter. If you do not specify the address of an output section in some
1893 other way (other ways are described later), the address is set from the
1894 current value of the location counter. The location counter is then
1895 incremented by the size of the output section. At the start of the
1896 @samp{SECTIONS} command, the location counter has the value @samp{0}.
1897
1898 The second line defines an output section, @samp{.text}. The colon is
1899 required syntax which may be ignored for now. Within the curly braces
1900 after the output section name, you list the names of the input sections
1901 which should be placed into this output section. The @samp{*} is a
1902 wildcard which matches any file name. The expression @samp{*(.text)}
1903 means all @samp{.text} input sections in all input files.
1904
1905 Since the location counter is @samp{0x10000} when the output section
1906 @samp{.text} is defined, the linker will set the address of the
1907 @samp{.text} section in the output file to be @samp{0x10000}.
1908
1909 The remaining lines define the @samp{.data} and @samp{.bss} sections in
1910 the output file. The linker will place the @samp{.data} output section
1911 at address @samp{0x8000000}. After the linker places the @samp{.data}
1912 output section, the value of the location counter will be
1913 @samp{0x8000000} plus the size of the @samp{.data} output section. The
1914 effect is that the linker will place the @samp{.bss} output section
1915 immediately after the @samp{.data} output section in memory
1916
1917 The linker will ensure that each output section has the required
1918 alignment, by increasing the location counter if necessary. In this
1919 example, the specified addresses for the @samp{.text} and @samp{.data}
1920 sections will probably satisfy any alignment constraints, but the linker
1921 may have to create a small gap between the @samp{.data} and @samp{.bss}
1922 sections.
1923
1924 That's it! That's a simple and complete linker script.
1925
1926 @node Simple Commands
1927 @section Simple Linker Script Commands
1928 @cindex linker script simple commands
1929 In this section we describe the simple linker script commands.
1930
1931 @menu
1932 * Entry Point:: Setting the entry point
1933 * File Commands:: Commands dealing with files
1934 @ifclear SingleFormat
1935 * Format Commands:: Commands dealing with object file formats
1936 @end ifclear
1937
1938 * Miscellaneous Commands:: Other linker script commands
1939 @end menu
1940
1941 @node Entry Point
1942 @subsection Setting the entry point
1943 @kindex ENTRY(@var{symbol})
1944 @cindex start of execution
1945 @cindex first instruction
1946 @cindex entry point
1947 The first instruction to execute in a program is called the @dfn{entry
1948 point}. You can use the @code{ENTRY} linker script command to set the
1949 entry point. The argument is a symbol name:
1950 @smallexample
1951 ENTRY(@var{symbol})
1952 @end smallexample
1953
1954 There are several ways to set the entry point. The linker will set the
1955 entry point by trying each of the following methods in order, and
1956 stopping when one of them succeeds:
1957 @itemize @bullet
1958 @item
1959 the @samp{-e} @var{entry} command-line option;
1960 @item
1961 the @code{ENTRY(@var{symbol})} command in a linker script;
1962 @item
1963 the value of the symbol @code{start}, if defined;
1964 @item
1965 the address of the first byte of the @samp{.text} section, if present;
1966 @item
1967 The address @code{0}.
1968 @end itemize
1969
1970 @node File Commands
1971 @subsection Commands dealing with files
1972 @cindex linker script file commands
1973 Several linker script commands deal with files.
1974
1975 @table @code
1976 @item INCLUDE @var{filename}
1977 @kindex INCLUDE @var{filename}
1978 @cindex including a linker script
1979 Include the linker script @var{filename} at this point. The file will
1980 be searched for in the current directory, and in any directory specified
1981 with the @code{-L} option. You can nest calls to @code{INCLUDE} up to
1982 10 levels deep.
1983
1984 @item INPUT(@var{file}, @var{file}, @dots{})
1985 @itemx INPUT(@var{file} @var{file} @dots{})
1986 @kindex INPUT(@var{files})
1987 @cindex input files in linker scripts
1988 @cindex input object files in linker scripts
1989 @cindex linker script input object files
1990 The @code{INPUT} command directs the linker to include the named files
1991 in the link, as though they were named on the command line.
1992
1993 For example, if you always want to include @file{subr.o} any time you do
1994 a link, but you can't be bothered to put it on every link command line,
1995 then you can put @samp{INPUT (subr.o)} in your linker script.
1996
1997 In fact, if you like, you can list all of your input files in the linker
1998 script, and then invoke the linker with nothing but a @samp{-T} option.
1999
2000 The linker will first try to open the file in the current directory. If
2001 it is not found, the linker will search through the archive library
2002 search path. See the description of @samp{-L} in @ref{Options,,Command
2003 Line Options}.
2004
2005 If you use @samp{INPUT (-l@var{file})}, @code{ld} will transform the
2006 name to @code{lib@var{file}.a}, as with the command line argument
2007 @samp{-l}.
2008
2009 When you use the @code{INPUT} command in an implicit linker script, the
2010 files will be included in the link at the point at which the linker
2011 script file is included. This can affect archive searching.
2012
2013 @item GROUP(@var{file}, @var{file}, @dots{})
2014 @itemx GROUP(@var{file} @var{file} @dots{})
2015 @kindex GROUP(@var{files})
2016 @cindex grouping input files
2017 The @code{GROUP} command is like @code{INPUT}, except that the named
2018 files should all be archives, and they are searched repeatedly until no
2019 new undefined references are created. See the description of @samp{-(}
2020 in @ref{Options,,Command Line Options}.
2021
2022 @item OUTPUT(@var{filename})
2023 @kindex OUTPUT(@var{filename})
2024 @cindex output file name in linker scripot
2025 The @code{OUTPUT} command names the output file. Using
2026 @code{OUTPUT(@var{filename})} in the linker script is exactly like using
2027 @samp{-o @var{filename}} on the command line (@pxref{Options,,Command
2028 Line Options}). If both are used, the command line option takes
2029 precedence.
2030
2031 You can use the @code{OUTPUT} command to define a default name for the
2032 output file other than the usual default of @file{a.out}.
2033
2034 @item SEARCH_DIR(@var{path})
2035 @kindex SEARCH_DIR(@var{path})
2036 @cindex library search path in linker script
2037 @cindex archive search path in linker script
2038 @cindex search path in linker script
2039 The @code{SEARCH_DIR} command adds @var{path} to the list of paths where
2040 @code{ld} looks for archive libraries. Using
2041 @code{SEARCH_DIR(@var{path})} is exactly like using @samp{-L @var{path}}
2042 on the command line (@pxref{Options,,Command Line Options}). If both
2043 are used, then the linker will search both paths. Paths specified using
2044 the command line option are searched first.
2045
2046 @item STARTUP(@var{filename})
2047 @kindex STARTUP(@var{filename})
2048 @cindex first input file
2049 The @code{STARTUP} command is just like the @code{INPUT} command, except
2050 that @var{filename} will become the first input file to be linked, as
2051 though it were specified first on the command line. This may be useful
2052 when using a system in which the entry point is always the start of the
2053 first file.
2054 @end table
2055
2056 @ifclear SingleFormat
2057 @node Format Commands
2058 @subsection Commands dealing with object file formats
2059 A couple of linker script commands deal with object file formats.
2060
2061 @table @code
2062 @item OUTPUT_FORMAT(@var{bfdname})
2063 @itemx OUTPUT_FORMAT(@var{default}, @var{big}, @var{little})
2064 @kindex OUTPUT_FORMAT(@var{bfdname})
2065 @cindex output file format in linker script
2066 The @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT} command names the BFD format to use for the
2067 output file (@pxref{BFD}). Using @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT(@var{bfdname})} is
2068 exactly like using @samp{-oformat @var{bfdname}} on the command line
2069 (@pxref{Options,,Command Line Options}). If both are used, the command
2070 line option takes precedence.
2071
2072 You can use @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT} with three arguments to use different
2073 formats based on the @samp{-EB} and @samp{-EL} command line options.
2074 This permits the linker script to set the output format based on the
2075 desired endianness.
2076
2077 If neither @samp{-EB} nor @samp{-EL} are used, then the output format
2078 will be the first argument, @var{default}. If @samp{-EB} is used, the
2079 output format will be the second argument, @var{big}. If @samp{-EL} is
2080 used, the output format will be the third argument, @var{little}.
2081
2082 For example, the default linker script for the MIPS ELF target uses this
2083 command:
2084 @smallexample
2085 OUTPUT_FORMAT(elf32-bigmips, elf32-bigmips, elf32-littlemips)
2086 @end smallexample
2087 This says that the default format for the output file is
2088 @samp{elf32-bigmips}, but if the user uses the @samp{-EL} command line
2089 option, the output file will be created in the @samp{elf32-littlemips}
2090 format.
2091
2092 @item TARGET(@var{bfdname})
2093 @kindex TARGET(@var{bfdname})
2094 @cindex input file format in linker script
2095 The @code{TARGET} command names the BFD format to use when reading input
2096 files. It affects subsequent @code{INPUT} and @code{GROUP} commands.
2097 This command is like using @samp{-b @var{bfdname}} on the command line
2098 (@pxref{Options,,Command Line Options}). If the @code{TARGET} command
2099 is used but @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT} is not, then the last @code{TARGET}
2100 command is also used to set the format for the output file. @xref{BFD}.
2101 @end table
2102 @end ifclear
2103
2104 @node Miscellaneous Commands
2105 @subsection Other linker script commands
2106 There are a few other linker scripts commands.
2107
2108 @table @code
2109 @item ASSERT(@var{exp}, @var{message})
2110 @kindex ASSERT
2111 @cindex assertion in linker script
2112 Ensure that @var{exp} is non-zero. If it is zero, then exit the linker
2113 with an error code, and print @var{message}.
2114
2115 @item EXTERN(@var{symbol} @var{symbol} @dots{})
2116 @kindex EXTERN
2117 @cindex undefined symbol in linker script
2118 Force @var{symbol} to be entered in the output file as an undefined
2119 symbol. Doing this may, for example, trigger linking of additional
2120 modules from standard libraries. You may list several @var{symbol}s for
2121 each @code{EXTERN}, and you may use @code{EXTERN} multiple times. This
2122 command has the same effect as the @samp{-u} command-line option.
2123
2124 @item FORCE_COMMON_ALLOCATION
2125 @kindex FORCE_COMMON_ALLOCATION
2126 @cindex common allocation in linker script
2127 This command has the same effect as the @samp{-d} command-line option:
2128 to make @code{ld} assign space to common symbols even if a relocatable
2129 output file is specified (@samp{-r}).
2130
2131 @item NOCROSSREFS(@var{section} @var{section} @dots{})
2132 @kindex NOCROSSREFS(@var{sections})
2133 @cindex cross references
2134 This command may be used to tell @code{ld} to issue an error about any
2135 references among certain output sections.
2136
2137 In certain types of programs, particularly on embedded systems when
2138 using overlays, when one section is loaded into memory, another section
2139 will not be. Any direct references between the two sections would be
2140 errors. For example, it would be an error if code in one section called
2141 a function defined in the other section.
2142
2143 The @code{NOCROSSREFS} command takes a list of output section names. If
2144 @code{ld} detects any cross references between the sections, it reports
2145 an error and returns a non-zero exit status. Note that the
2146 @code{NOCROSSREFS} command uses output section names, not input section
2147 names.
2148
2149 @ifclear SingleFormat
2150 @item OUTPUT_ARCH(@var{bfdarch})
2151 @kindex OUTPUT_ARCH(@var{bfdarch})
2152 @cindex machine architecture
2153 @cindex architecture
2154 Specify a particular output machine architecture. The argument is one
2155 of the names used by the BFD library (@pxref{BFD}). You can see the
2156 architecture of an object file by using the @code{objdump} program with
2157 the @samp{-f} option.
2158 @end ifclear
2159 @end table
2160
2161 @node Assignments
2162 @section Assigning Values to Symbols
2163 @cindex assignment in scripts
2164 @cindex symbol definition, scripts
2165 @cindex variables, defining
2166 You may assign a value to a symbol in a linker script. This will define
2167 the symbol as a global symbol.
2168
2169 @menu
2170 * Simple Assignments:: Simple Assignments
2171 * PROVIDE:: PROVIDE
2172 @end menu
2173
2174 @node Simple Assignments
2175 @subsection Simple Assignments
2176
2177 You may assign to a symbol using any of the C assignment operators:
2178
2179 @table @code
2180 @item @var{symbol} = @var{expression} ;
2181 @itemx @var{symbol} += @var{expression} ;
2182 @itemx @var{symbol} -= @var{expression} ;
2183 @itemx @var{symbol} *= @var{expression} ;
2184 @itemx @var{symbol} /= @var{expression} ;
2185 @itemx @var{symbol} <<= @var{expression} ;
2186 @itemx @var{symbol} >>= @var{expression} ;
2187 @itemx @var{symbol} &= @var{expression} ;
2188 @itemx @var{symbol} |= @var{expression} ;
2189 @end table
2190
2191 The first case will define @var{symbol} to the value of
2192 @var{expression}. In the other cases, @var{symbol} must already be
2193 defined, and the value will be adjusted accordingly.
2194
2195 The special symbol name @samp{.} indicates the location counter. You
2196 may only use this within a @code{SECTIONS} command.
2197
2198 The semicolon after @var{expression} is required.
2199
2200 Expressions are defined below; see @ref{Expressions}.
2201
2202 You may write symbol assignments as commands in their own right, or as
2203 statements within a @code{SECTIONS} command, or as part of an output
2204 section description in a @code{SECTIONS} command.
2205
2206 The section of the symbol will be set from the section of the
2207 expression; for more information, see @ref{Expression Section}.
2208
2209 Here is an example showing the three different places that symbol
2210 assignments may be used:
2211
2212 @smallexample
2213 floating_point = 0;
2214 SECTIONS
2215 @{
2216 .text :
2217 @{
2218 *(.text)
2219 _etext = .;
2220 @}
2221 _bdata = (. + 3) & ~ 4;
2222 .data : @{ *(.data) @}
2223 @}
2224 @end smallexample
2225 @noindent
2226 In this example, the symbol @samp{floating_point} will be defined as
2227 zero. The symbol @samp{_etext} will be defined as the address following
2228 the last @samp{.text} input section. The symbol @samp{_bdata} will be
2229 defined as the address following the @samp{.text} output section aligned
2230 upward to a 4 byte boundary.
2231
2232 @node PROVIDE
2233 @subsection PROVIDE
2234 @cindex PROVIDE
2235 In some cases, it is desirable for a linker script to define a symbol
2236 only if it is referenced and is not defined by any object included in
2237 the link. For example, traditional linkers defined the symbol
2238 @samp{etext}. However, ANSI C requires that the user be able to use
2239 @samp{etext} as a function name without encountering an error. The
2240 @code{PROVIDE} keyword may be used to define a symbol, such as
2241 @samp{etext}, only if it is referenced but not defined. The syntax is
2242 @code{PROVIDE(@var{symbol} = @var{expression})}.
2243
2244 Here is an example of using @code{PROVIDE} to define @samp{etext}:
2245 @smallexample
2246 SECTIONS
2247 @{
2248 .text :
2249 @{
2250 *(.text)
2251 _etext = .;
2252 PROVIDE(etext = .);
2253 @}
2254 @}
2255 @end smallexample
2256
2257 In this example, if the program defines @samp{_etext} (with a leading
2258 underscore), the linker will give a multiple definition error. If, on
2259 the other hand, the program defines @samp{etext} (with no leading
2260 underscore), the linker will silently use the definition in the program.
2261 If the program references @samp{etext} but does not define it, the
2262 linker will use the definition in the linker script.
2263
2264 @node SECTIONS
2265 @section SECTIONS command
2266 @kindex SECTIONS
2267 The @code{SECTIONS} command tells the linker how to map input sections
2268 into output sections, and how to place the output sections in memory.
2269
2270 The format of the @code{SECTIONS} command is:
2271 @smallexample
2272 SECTIONS
2273 @{
2274 @var{sections-command}
2275 @var{sections-command}
2276 @dots{}
2277 @}
2278 @end smallexample
2279
2280 Each @var{sections-command} may of be one of the following:
2281
2282 @itemize @bullet
2283 @item
2284 an @code{ENTRY} command (@pxref{Entry Point,,Entry command})
2285 @item
2286 a symbol assignment (@pxref{Assignments})
2287 @item
2288 an output section description
2289 @item
2290 an overlay description
2291 @end itemize
2292
2293 The @code{ENTRY} command and symbol assignments are permitted inside the
2294 @code{SECTIONS} command for convenience in using the location counter in
2295 those commands. This can also make the linker script easier to
2296 understand because you can use those commands at meaningful points in
2297 the layout of the output file.
2298
2299 Output section descriptions and overlay descriptions are described
2300 below.
2301
2302 If you do not use a @code{SECTIONS} command in your linker script, the
2303 linker will place each input section into an identically named output
2304 section in the order that the sections are first encountered in the
2305 input files. If all input sections are present in the first file, for
2306 example, the order of sections in the output file will match the order
2307 in the first input file. The first section will be at address zero.
2308
2309 @menu
2310 * Output Section Description:: Output section description
2311 * Output Section Name:: Output section name
2312 * Output Section Address:: Output section address
2313 * Input Section:: Input section description
2314 * Output Section Data:: Output section data
2315 * Output Section Keywords:: Output section keywords
2316 * Output Section Discarding:: Output section discarding
2317 * Output Section Attributes:: Output section attributes
2318 * Overlay Description:: Overlay description
2319 @end menu
2320
2321 @node Output Section Description
2322 @subsection Output section description
2323 The full description of an output section looks like this:
2324 @smallexample
2325 @group
2326 @var{section} [@var{address}] [(@var{type})] : [AT(@var{lma})]
2327 @{
2328 @var{output-section-command}
2329 @var{output-section-command}
2330 @dots{}
2331 @} [>@var{region}] [AT>@var{lma_region}] [:@var{phdr} :@var{phdr} @dots{}] [=@var{fillexp}]
2332 @end group
2333 @end smallexample
2334
2335 Most output sections do not use most of the optional section attributes.
2336
2337 The whitespace around @var{section} is required, so that the section
2338 name is unambiguous. The colon and the curly braces are also required.
2339 The line breaks and other white space are optional.
2340
2341 Each @var{output-section-command} may be one of the following:
2342
2343 @itemize @bullet
2344 @item
2345 a symbol assignment (@pxref{Assignments})
2346 @item
2347 an input section description (@pxref{Input Section})
2348 @item
2349 data values to include directly (@pxref{Output Section Data})
2350 @item
2351 a special output section keyword (@pxref{Output Section Keywords})
2352 @end itemize
2353
2354 @node Output Section Name
2355 @subsection Output section name
2356 @cindex name, section
2357 @cindex section name
2358 The name of the output section is @var{section}. @var{section} must
2359 meet the constraints of your output format. In formats which only
2360 support a limited number of sections, such as @code{a.out}, the name
2361 must be one of the names supported by the format (@code{a.out}, for
2362 example, allows only @samp{.text}, @samp{.data} or @samp{.bss}). If the
2363 output format supports any number of sections, but with numbers and not
2364 names (as is the case for Oasys), the name should be supplied as a
2365 quoted numeric string. A section name may consist of any sequence of
2366 characters, but a name which contains any unusual characters such as
2367 commas must be quoted.
2368
2369 The output section name @samp{/DISCARD/} is special; @ref{Output Section
2370 Discarding}.
2371
2372 @node Output Section Address
2373 @subsection Output section address
2374 @cindex address, section
2375 @cindex section address
2376 The @var{address} is an expression for the VMA (the virtual memory
2377 address) of the output section. If you do not provide @var{address},
2378 the linker will set it based on @var{region} if present, or otherwise
2379 based on the current value of the location counter.
2380
2381 If you provide @var{address}, the address of the output section will be
2382 set to precisely that. If you provide neither @var{address} nor
2383 @var{region}, then the address of the output section will be set to the
2384 current value of the location counter aligned to the alignment
2385 requirements of the output section. The alignment requirement of the
2386 output section is the strictest alignment of any input section contained
2387 within the output section.
2388
2389 For example,
2390 @smallexample
2391 .text . : @{ *(.text) @}
2392 @end smallexample
2393 @noindent
2394 and
2395 @smallexample
2396 .text : @{ *(.text) @}
2397 @end smallexample
2398 @noindent
2399 are subtly different. The first will set the address of the
2400 @samp{.text} output section to the current value of the location
2401 counter. The second will set it to the current value of the location
2402 counter aligned to the strictest alignment of a @samp{.text} input
2403 section.
2404
2405 The @var{address} may be an arbitrary expression; @ref{Expressions}.
2406 For example, if you want to align the section on a 0x10 byte boundary,
2407 so that the lowest four bits of the section address are zero, you could
2408 do something like this:
2409 @smallexample
2410 .text ALIGN(0x10) : @{ *(.text) @}
2411 @end smallexample
2412 @noindent
2413 This works because @code{ALIGN} returns the current location counter
2414 aligned upward to the specified value.
2415
2416 Specifying @var{address} for a section will change the value of the
2417 location counter.
2418
2419 @node Input Section
2420 @subsection Input section description
2421 @cindex input sections
2422 @cindex mapping input sections to output sections
2423 The most common output section command is an input section description.
2424
2425 The input section description is the most basic linker script operation.
2426 You use output sections to tell the linker how to lay out your program
2427 in memory. You use input section descriptions to tell the linker how to
2428 map the input files into your memory layout.
2429
2430 @menu
2431 * Input Section Basics:: Input section basics
2432 * Input Section Wildcards:: Input section wildcard patterns
2433 * Input Section Common:: Input section for common symbols
2434 * Input Section Keep:: Input section and garbage collection
2435 * Input Section Example:: Input section example
2436 @end menu
2437
2438 @node Input Section Basics
2439 @subsubsection Input section basics
2440 @cindex input section basics
2441 An input section description consists of a file name optionally followed
2442 by a list of section names in parentheses.
2443
2444 The file name and the section name may be wildcard patterns, which we
2445 describe further below (@pxref{Input Section Wildcards}).
2446
2447 The most common input section description is to include all input
2448 sections with a particular name in the output section. For example, to
2449 include all input @samp{.text} sections, you would write:
2450 @smallexample
2451 *(.text)
2452 @end smallexample
2453 @noindent
2454 Here the @samp{*} is a wildcard which matches any file name. To exclude a list
2455 of files from matching the file name wildcard, EXCLUDE_FILE may be used to
2456 match all files except the ones specified in the EXCLUDE_FILE list. For
2457 example:
2458 @smallexample
2459 (*(EXCLUDE_FILE (*crtend.o *otherfile.o) .ctors))
2460 @end smallexample
2461 will cause all .ctors sections from all files except @file{crtend.o} and
2462 @file{otherfile.o} to be included.
2463
2464 There are two ways to include more than one section:
2465 @smallexample
2466 *(.text .rdata)
2467 *(.text) *(.rdata)
2468 @end smallexample
2469 @noindent
2470 The difference between these is the order in which the @samp{.text} and
2471 @samp{.rdata} input sections will appear in the output section. In the
2472 first example, they will be intermingled. In the second example, all
2473 @samp{.text} input sections will appear first, followed by all
2474 @samp{.rdata} input sections.
2475
2476 You can specify a file name to include sections from a particular file.
2477 You would do this if one or more of your files contain special data that
2478 needs to be at a particular location in memory. For example:
2479 @smallexample
2480 data.o(.data)
2481 @end smallexample
2482
2483 If you use a file name without a list of sections, then all sections in
2484 the input file will be included in the output section. This is not
2485 commonly done, but it may by useful on occasion. For example:
2486 @smallexample
2487 data.o
2488 @end smallexample
2489
2490 When you use a file name which does not contain any wild card
2491 characters, the linker will first see if you also specified the file
2492 name on the linker command line or in an @code{INPUT} command. If you
2493 did not, the linker will attempt to open the file as an input file, as
2494 though it appeared on the command line. Note that this differs from an
2495 @code{INPUT} command, because the linker will not search for the file in
2496 the archive search path.
2497
2498 @node Input Section Wildcards
2499 @subsubsection Input section wildcard patterns
2500 @cindex input section wildcards
2501 @cindex wildcard file name patterns
2502 @cindex file name wildcard patterns
2503 @cindex section name wildcard patterns
2504 In an input section description, either the file name or the section
2505 name or both may be wildcard patterns.
2506
2507 The file name of @samp{*} seen in many examples is a simple wildcard
2508 pattern for the file name.
2509
2510 The wildcard patterns are like those used by the Unix shell.
2511
2512 @table @samp
2513 @item *
2514 matches any number of characters
2515 @item ?
2516 matches any single character
2517 @item [@var{chars}]
2518 matches a single instance of any of the @var{chars}; the @samp{-}
2519 character may be used to specify a range of characters, as in
2520 @samp{[a-z]} to match any lower case letter
2521 @item \
2522 quotes the following character
2523 @end table
2524
2525 When a file name is matched with a wildcard, the wildcard characters
2526 will not match a @samp{/} character (used to separate directory names on
2527 Unix). A pattern consisting of a single @samp{*} character is an
2528 exception; it will always match any file name, whether it contains a
2529 @samp{/} or not. In a section name, the wildcard characters will match
2530 a @samp{/} character.
2531
2532 File name wildcard patterns only match files which are explicitly
2533 specified on the command line or in an @code{INPUT} command. The linker
2534 does not search directories to expand wildcards.
2535
2536 If a file name matches more than one wildcard pattern, or if a file name
2537 appears explicitly and is also matched by a wildcard pattern, the linker
2538 will use the first match in the linker script. For example, this
2539 sequence of input section descriptions is probably in error, because the
2540 @file{data.o} rule will not be used:
2541 @smallexample
2542 .data : @{ *(.data) @}
2543 .data1 : @{ data.o(.data) @}
2544 @end smallexample
2545
2546 @cindex SORT
2547 Normally, the linker will place files and sections matched by wildcards
2548 in the order in which they are seen during the link. You can change
2549 this by using the @code{SORT} keyword, which appears before a wildcard
2550 pattern in parentheses (e.g., @code{SORT(.text*)}). When the
2551 @code{SORT} keyword is used, the linker will sort the files or sections
2552 into ascending order by name before placing them in the output file.
2553
2554 If you ever get confused about where input sections are going, use the
2555 @samp{-M} linker option to generate a map file. The map file shows
2556 precisely how input sections are mapped to output sections.
2557
2558 This example shows how wildcard patterns might be used to partition
2559 files. This linker script directs the linker to place all @samp{.text}
2560 sections in @samp{.text} and all @samp{.bss} sections in @samp{.bss}.
2561 The linker will place the @samp{.data} section from all files beginning
2562 with an upper case character in @samp{.DATA}; for all other files, the
2563 linker will place the @samp{.data} section in @samp{.data}.
2564 @smallexample
2565 @group
2566 SECTIONS @{
2567 .text : @{ *(.text) @}
2568 .DATA : @{ [A-Z]*(.data) @}
2569 .data : @{ *(.data) @}
2570 .bss : @{ *(.bss) @}
2571 @}
2572 @end group
2573 @end smallexample
2574
2575 @node Input Section Common
2576 @subsubsection Input section for common symbols
2577 @cindex common symbol placement
2578 @cindex uninitialized data placement
2579 A special notation is needed for common symbols, because in many object
2580 file formats common symbols do not have a particular input section. The
2581 linker treats common symbols as though they are in an input section
2582 named @samp{COMMON}.
2583
2584 You may use file names with the @samp{COMMON} section just as with any
2585 other input sections. You can use this to place common symbols from a
2586 particular input file in one section while common symbols from other
2587 input files are placed in another section.
2588
2589 In most cases, common symbols in input files will be placed in the
2590 @samp{.bss} section in the output file. For example:
2591 @smallexample
2592 .bss @{ *(.bss) *(COMMON) @}
2593 @end smallexample
2594
2595 @cindex scommon section
2596 @cindex small common symbols
2597 Some object file formats have more than one type of common symbol. For
2598 example, the MIPS ELF object file format distinguishes standard common
2599 symbols and small common symbols. In this case, the linker will use a
2600 different special section name for other types of common symbols. In
2601 the case of MIPS ELF, the linker uses @samp{COMMON} for standard common
2602 symbols and @samp{.scommon} for small common symbols. This permits you
2603 to map the different types of common symbols into memory at different
2604 locations.
2605
2606 @cindex [COMMON]
2607 You will sometimes see @samp{[COMMON]} in old linker scripts. This
2608 notation is now considered obsolete. It is equivalent to
2609 @samp{*(COMMON)}.
2610
2611 @node Input Section Keep
2612 @subsubsection Input section and garbage collection
2613 @cindex KEEP
2614 @cindex garbage collection
2615 When link-time garbage collection is in use (@samp{--gc-sections}),
2616 it is often useful to mark sections that should not be eliminated.
2617 This is accomplished by surrounding an input section's wildcard entry
2618 with @code{KEEP()}, as in @code{KEEP(*(.init))} or
2619 @code{KEEP(SORT(*)(.ctors))}.
2620
2621 @node Input Section Example
2622 @subsubsection Input section example
2623 The following example is a complete linker script. It tells the linker
2624 to read all of the sections from file @file{all.o} and place them at the
2625 start of output section @samp{outputa} which starts at location
2626 @samp{0x10000}. All of section @samp{.input1} from file @file{foo.o}
2627 follows immediately, in the same output section. All of section
2628 @samp{.input2} from @file{foo.o} goes into output section
2629 @samp{outputb}, followed by section @samp{.input1} from @file{foo1.o}.
2630 All of the remaining @samp{.input1} and @samp{.input2} sections from any
2631 files are written to output section @samp{outputc}.
2632
2633 @smallexample
2634 @group
2635 SECTIONS @{
2636 outputa 0x10000 :
2637 @{
2638 all.o
2639 foo.o (.input1)
2640 @}
2641 outputb :
2642 @{
2643 foo.o (.input2)
2644 foo1.o (.input1)
2645 @}
2646 outputc :
2647 @{
2648 *(.input1)
2649 *(.input2)
2650 @}
2651 @}
2652 @end group
2653 @end smallexample
2654
2655 @node Output Section Data
2656 @subsection Output section data
2657 @cindex data
2658 @cindex section data
2659 @cindex output section data
2660 @kindex BYTE(@var{expression})
2661 @kindex SHORT(@var{expression})
2662 @kindex LONG(@var{expression})
2663 @kindex QUAD(@var{expression})
2664 @kindex SQUAD(@var{expression})
2665 You can include explicit bytes of data in an output section by using
2666 @code{BYTE}, @code{SHORT}, @code{LONG}, @code{QUAD}, or @code{SQUAD} as
2667 an output section command. Each keyword is followed by an expression in
2668 parentheses providing the value to store (@pxref{Expressions}). The
2669 value of the expression is stored at the current value of the location
2670 counter.
2671
2672 The @code{BYTE}, @code{SHORT}, @code{LONG}, and @code{QUAD} commands
2673 store one, two, four, and eight bytes (respectively). After storing the
2674 bytes, the location counter is incremented by the number of bytes
2675 stored.
2676
2677 For example, this will store the byte 1 followed by the four byte value
2678 of the symbol @samp{addr}:
2679 @smallexample
2680 BYTE(1)
2681 LONG(addr)
2682 @end smallexample
2683
2684 When using a 64 bit host or target, @code{QUAD} and @code{SQUAD} are the
2685 same; they both store an 8 byte, or 64 bit, value. When both host and
2686 target are 32 bits, an expression is computed as 32 bits. In this case
2687 @code{QUAD} stores a 32 bit value zero extended to 64 bits, and
2688 @code{SQUAD} stores a 32 bit value sign extended to 64 bits.
2689
2690 If the object file format of the output file has an explicit endianness,
2691 which is the normal case, the value will be stored in that endianness.
2692 When the object file format does not have an explicit endianness, as is
2693 true of, for example, S-records, the value will be stored in the
2694 endianness of the first input object file.
2695
2696 Note - these commands only work inside a section description and not
2697 between them, so the following will produce an error from the linker:
2698 @smallexample
2699 SECTIONS @{@ .text : @{@ *(.text) @}@ LONG(1) .data : @{@ *(.data) @}@ @}@
2700 @end smallexample
2701 whereas this will work:
2702 @smallexample
2703 SECTIONS @{@ .text : @{@ *(.text) ; LONG(1) @}@ .data : @{@ *(.data) @}@ @}@
2704 @end smallexample
2705
2706 @kindex FILL(@var{expression})
2707 @cindex holes, filling
2708 @cindex unspecified memory
2709 You may use the @code{FILL} command to set the fill pattern for the
2710 current section. It is followed by an expression in parentheses. Any
2711 otherwise unspecified regions of memory within the section (for example,
2712 gaps left due to the required alignment of input sections) are filled
2713 with the two least significant bytes of the expression, repeated as
2714 necessary. A @code{FILL} statement covers memory locations after the
2715 point at which it occurs in the section definition; by including more
2716 than one @code{FILL} statement, you can have different fill patterns in
2717 different parts of an output section.
2718
2719 This example shows how to fill unspecified regions of memory with the
2720 value @samp{0x9090}:
2721 @smallexample
2722 FILL(0x9090)
2723 @end smallexample
2724
2725 The @code{FILL} command is similar to the @samp{=@var{fillexp}} output
2726 section attribute (@pxref{Output Section Fill}), but it only affects the
2727 part of the section following the @code{FILL} command, rather than the
2728 entire section. If both are used, the @code{FILL} command takes
2729 precedence.
2730
2731 @node Output Section Keywords
2732 @subsection Output section keywords
2733 There are a couple of keywords which can appear as output section
2734 commands.
2735
2736 @table @code
2737 @kindex CREATE_OBJECT_SYMBOLS
2738 @cindex input filename symbols
2739 @cindex filename symbols
2740 @item CREATE_OBJECT_SYMBOLS
2741 The command tells the linker to create a symbol for each input file.
2742 The name of each symbol will be the name of the corresponding input
2743 file. The section of each symbol will be the output section in which
2744 the @code{CREATE_OBJECT_SYMBOLS} command appears.
2745
2746 This is conventional for the a.out object file format. It is not
2747 normally used for any other object file format.
2748
2749 @kindex CONSTRUCTORS
2750 @cindex C++ constructors, arranging in link
2751 @cindex constructors, arranging in link
2752 @item CONSTRUCTORS
2753 When linking using the a.out object file format, the linker uses an
2754 unusual set construct to support C++ global constructors and
2755 destructors. When linking object file formats which do not support
2756 arbitrary sections, such as ECOFF and XCOFF, the linker will
2757 automatically recognize C++ global constructors and destructors by name.
2758 For these object file formats, the @code{CONSTRUCTORS} command tells the
2759 linker to place constructor information in the output section where the
2760 @code{CONSTRUCTORS} command appears. The @code{CONSTRUCTORS} command is
2761 ignored for other object file formats.
2762
2763 The symbol @w{@code{__CTOR_LIST__}} marks the start of the global
2764 constructors, and the symbol @w{@code{__DTOR_LIST}} marks the end. The
2765 first word in the list is the number of entries, followed by the address
2766 of each constructor or destructor, followed by a zero word. The
2767 compiler must arrange to actually run the code. For these object file
2768 formats @sc{gnu} C++ normally calls constructors from a subroutine
2769 @code{__main}; a call to @code{__main} is automatically inserted into
2770 the startup code for @code{main}. @sc{gnu} C++ normally runs
2771 destructors either by using @code{atexit}, or directly from the function
2772 @code{exit}.
2773
2774 For object file formats such as @code{COFF} or @code{ELF} which support
2775 arbitrary section names, @sc{gnu} C++ will normally arrange to put the
2776 addresses of global constructors and destructors into the @code{.ctors}
2777 and @code{.dtors} sections. Placing the following sequence into your
2778 linker script will build the sort of table which the @sc{gnu} C++
2779 runtime code expects to see.
2780
2781 @smallexample
2782 __CTOR_LIST__ = .;
2783 LONG((__CTOR_END__ - __CTOR_LIST__) / 4 - 2)
2784 *(.ctors)
2785 LONG(0)
2786 __CTOR_END__ = .;
2787 __DTOR_LIST__ = .;
2788 LONG((__DTOR_END__ - __DTOR_LIST__) / 4 - 2)
2789 *(.dtors)
2790 LONG(0)
2791 __DTOR_END__ = .;
2792 @end smallexample
2793
2794 If you are using the @sc{gnu} C++ support for initialization priority,
2795 which provides some control over the order in which global constructors
2796 are run, you must sort the constructors at link time to ensure that they
2797 are executed in the correct order. When using the @code{CONSTRUCTORS}
2798 command, use @samp{SORT(CONSTRUCTORS)} instead. When using the
2799 @code{.ctors} and @code{.dtors} sections, use @samp{*(SORT(.ctors))} and
2800 @samp{*(SORT(.dtors))} instead of just @samp{*(.ctors)} and
2801 @samp{*(.dtors)}.
2802
2803 Normally the compiler and linker will handle these issues automatically,
2804 and you will not need to concern yourself with them. However, you may
2805 need to consider this if you are using C++ and writing your own linker
2806 scripts.
2807
2808 @end table
2809
2810 @node Output Section Discarding
2811 @subsection Output section discarding
2812 @cindex discarding sections
2813 @cindex sections, discarding
2814 @cindex removing sections
2815 The linker will not create output section which do not have any
2816 contents. This is for convenience when referring to input sections that
2817 may or may not be present in any of the input files. For example:
2818 @smallexample
2819 .foo @{ *(.foo) @}
2820 @end smallexample
2821 @noindent
2822 will only create a @samp{.foo} section in the output file if there is a
2823 @samp{.foo} section in at least one input file.
2824
2825 If you use anything other than an input section description as an output
2826 section command, such as a symbol assignment, then the output section
2827 will always be created, even if there are no matching input sections.
2828
2829 @cindex /DISCARD/
2830 The special output section name @samp{/DISCARD/} may be used to discard
2831 input sections. Any input sections which are assigned to an output
2832 section named @samp{/DISCARD/} are not included in the output file.
2833
2834 @node Output Section Attributes
2835 @subsection Output section attributes
2836 @cindex output section attributes
2837 We showed above that the full description of an output section looked
2838 like this:
2839 @smallexample
2840 @group
2841 @var{section} [@var{address}] [(@var{type})] : [AT(@var{lma})]
2842 @{
2843 @var{output-section-command}
2844 @var{output-section-command}
2845 @dots{}
2846 @} [>@var{region}] [AT>@var{lma_region}] [:@var{phdr} :@var{phdr} @dots{}] [=@var{fillexp}]
2847 @end group
2848 @end smallexample
2849 We've already described @var{section}, @var{address}, and
2850 @var{output-section-command}. In this section we will describe the
2851 remaining section attributes.
2852
2853 @menu
2854 * Output Section Type:: Output section type
2855 * Output Section LMA:: Output section LMA
2856 * Output Section Region:: Output section region
2857 * Output Section Phdr:: Output section phdr
2858 * Output Section Fill:: Output section fill
2859 @end menu
2860
2861 @node Output Section Type
2862 @subsubsection Output section type
2863 Each output section may have a type. The type is a keyword in
2864 parentheses. The following types are defined:
2865
2866 @table @code
2867 @item NOLOAD
2868 The section should be marked as not loadable, so that it will not be
2869 loaded into memory when the program is run.
2870 @item DSECT
2871 @itemx COPY
2872 @itemx INFO
2873 @itemx OVERLAY
2874 These type names are supported for backward compatibility, and are
2875 rarely used. They all have the same effect: the section should be
2876 marked as not allocatable, so that no memory is allocated for the
2877 section when the program is run.
2878 @end table
2879
2880 @kindex NOLOAD
2881 @cindex prevent unnecessary loading
2882 @cindex loading, preventing
2883 The linker normally sets the attributes of an output section based on
2884 the input sections which map into it. You can override this by using
2885 the section type. For example, in the script sample below, the
2886 @samp{ROM} section is addressed at memory location @samp{0} and does not
2887 need to be loaded when the program is run. The contents of the
2888 @samp{ROM} section will appear in the linker output file as usual.
2889 @smallexample
2890 @group
2891 SECTIONS @{
2892 ROM 0 (NOLOAD) : @{ @dots{} @}
2893 @dots{}
2894 @}
2895 @end group
2896 @end smallexample
2897
2898 @node Output Section LMA
2899 @subsubsection Output section LMA
2900 @kindex AT>@var{lma_region}
2901 @kindex AT(@var{lma})
2902 @cindex load address
2903 @cindex section load address
2904 Every section has a virtual address (VMA) and a load address (LMA); see
2905 @ref{Basic Script Concepts}. The address expression which may appear in
2906 an output section description sets the VMA (@pxref{Output Section
2907 Address}).
2908
2909 The linker will normally set the LMA equal to the VMA. You can change
2910 that by using the @code{AT} keyword. The expression @var{lma} that
2911 follows the @code{AT} keyword specifies the load address of the
2912 section. Alternatively, with @samp{AT>@var{lma_region}} expression,
2913 you may specify a memory region for the section's load address. @xref{MEMORY}.
2914
2915 @cindex ROM initialized data
2916 @cindex initialized data in ROM
2917 This feature is designed to make it easy to build a ROM image. For
2918 example, the following linker script creates three output sections: one
2919 called @samp{.text}, which starts at @code{0x1000}, one called
2920 @samp{.mdata}, which is loaded at the end of the @samp{.text} section
2921 even though its VMA is @code{0x2000}, and one called @samp{.bss} to hold
2922 uninitialized data at address @code{0x3000}. The symbol @code{_data} is
2923 defined with the value @code{0x2000}, which shows that the location
2924 counter holds the VMA value, not the LMA value.
2925
2926 @smallexample
2927 @group
2928 SECTIONS
2929 @{
2930 .text 0x1000 : @{ *(.text) _etext = . ; @}
2931 .mdata 0x2000 :
2932 AT ( ADDR (.text) + SIZEOF (.text) )
2933 @{ _data = . ; *(.data); _edata = . ; @}
2934 .bss 0x3000 :
2935 @{ _bstart = . ; *(.bss) *(COMMON) ; _bend = . ;@}
2936 @}
2937 @end group
2938 @end smallexample
2939
2940 The run-time initialization code for use with a program generated with
2941 this linker script would include something like the following, to copy
2942 the initialized data from the ROM image to its runtime address. Notice
2943 how this code takes advantage of the symbols defined by the linker
2944 script.
2945
2946 @smallexample
2947 @group
2948 extern char _etext, _data, _edata, _bstart, _bend;
2949 char *src = &_etext;
2950 char *dst = &_data;
2951
2952 /* ROM has data at end of text; copy it. */
2953 while (dst < &_edata) @{
2954 *dst++ = *src++;
2955 @}
2956
2957 /* Zero bss */
2958 for (dst = &_bstart; dst< &_bend; dst++)
2959 *dst = 0;
2960 @end group
2961 @end smallexample
2962
2963 @node Output Section Region
2964 @subsubsection Output section region
2965 @kindex >@var{region}
2966 @cindex section, assigning to memory region
2967 @cindex memory regions and sections
2968 You can assign a section to a previously defined region of memory by
2969 using @samp{>@var{region}}. @xref{MEMORY}.
2970
2971 Here is a simple example:
2972 @smallexample
2973 @group
2974 MEMORY @{ rom : ORIGIN = 0x1000, LENGTH = 0x1000 @}
2975 SECTIONS @{ ROM : @{ *(.text) @} >rom @}
2976 @end group
2977 @end smallexample
2978
2979 @node Output Section Phdr
2980 @subsubsection Output section phdr
2981 @kindex :@var{phdr}
2982 @cindex section, assigning to program header
2983 @cindex program headers and sections
2984 You can assign a section to a previously defined program segment by
2985 using @samp{:@var{phdr}}. @xref{PHDRS}. If a section is assigned to
2986 one or more segments, then all subsequent allocated sections will be
2987 assigned to those segments as well, unless they use an explicitly
2988 @code{:@var{phdr}} modifier. You can use @code{:NONE} to tell the
2989 linker to not put the section in any segment at all.
2990
2991 Here is a simple example:
2992 @smallexample
2993 @group
2994 PHDRS @{ text PT_LOAD ; @}
2995 SECTIONS @{ .text : @{ *(.text) @} :text @}
2996 @end group
2997 @end smallexample
2998
2999 @node Output Section Fill
3000 @subsubsection Output section fill
3001 @kindex =@var{fillexp}
3002 @cindex section fill pattern
3003 @cindex fill pattern, entire section
3004 You can set the fill pattern for an entire section by using
3005 @samp{=@var{fillexp}}. @var{fillexp} is an expression
3006 (@pxref{Expressions}). Any otherwise unspecified regions of memory
3007 within the output section (for example, gaps left due to the required
3008 alignment of input sections) will be filled with the two least
3009 significant bytes of the value, repeated as necessary.
3010
3011 You can also change the fill value with a @code{FILL} command in the
3012 output section commands; see @ref{Output Section Data}.
3013
3014 Here is a simple example:
3015 @smallexample
3016 @group
3017 SECTIONS @{ .text : @{ *(.text) @} =0x9090 @}
3018 @end group
3019 @end smallexample
3020
3021 @node Overlay Description
3022 @subsection Overlay description
3023 @kindex OVERLAY
3024 @cindex overlays
3025 An overlay description provides an easy way to describe sections which
3026 are to be loaded as part of a single memory image but are to be run at
3027 the same memory address. At run time, some sort of overlay manager will
3028 copy the overlaid sections in and out of the runtime memory address as
3029 required, perhaps by simply manipulating addressing bits. This approach
3030 can be useful, for example, when a certain region of memory is faster
3031 than another.
3032
3033 Overlays are described using the @code{OVERLAY} command. The
3034 @code{OVERLAY} command is used within a @code{SECTIONS} command, like an
3035 output section description. The full syntax of the @code{OVERLAY}
3036 command is as follows:
3037 @smallexample
3038 @group
3039 OVERLAY [@var{start}] : [NOCROSSREFS] [AT ( @var{ldaddr} )]
3040 @{
3041 @var{secname1}
3042 @{
3043 @var{output-section-command}
3044 @var{output-section-command}
3045 @dots{}
3046 @} [:@var{phdr}@dots{}] [=@var{fill}]
3047 @var{secname2}
3048 @{
3049 @var{output-section-command}
3050 @var{output-section-command}
3051 @dots{}
3052 @} [:@var{phdr}@dots{}] [=@var{fill}]
3053 @dots{}
3054 @} [>@var{region}] [:@var{phdr}@dots{}] [=@var{fill}]
3055 @end group
3056 @end smallexample
3057
3058 Everything is optional except @code{OVERLAY} (a keyword), and each
3059 section must have a name (@var{secname1} and @var{secname2} above). The
3060 section definitions within the @code{OVERLAY} construct are identical to
3061 those within the general @code{SECTIONS} contruct (@pxref{SECTIONS}),
3062 except that no addresses and no memory regions may be defined for
3063 sections within an @code{OVERLAY}.
3064
3065 The sections are all defined with the same starting address. The load
3066 addresses of the sections are arranged such that they are consecutive in
3067 memory starting at the load address used for the @code{OVERLAY} as a
3068 whole (as with normal section definitions, the load address is optional,
3069 and defaults to the start address; the start address is also optional,
3070 and defaults to the current value of the location counter).
3071
3072 If the @code{NOCROSSREFS} keyword is used, and there any references
3073 among the sections, the linker will report an error. Since the sections
3074 all run at the same address, it normally does not make sense for one
3075 section to refer directly to another. @xref{Miscellaneous Commands,
3076 NOCROSSREFS}.
3077
3078 For each section within the @code{OVERLAY}, the linker automatically
3079 defines two symbols. The symbol @code{__load_start_@var{secname}} is
3080 defined as the starting load address of the section. The symbol
3081 @code{__load_stop_@var{secname}} is defined as the final load address of
3082 the section. Any characters within @var{secname} which are not legal
3083 within C identifiers are removed. C (or assembler) code may use these
3084 symbols to move the overlaid sections around as necessary.
3085
3086 At the end of the overlay, the value of the location counter is set to
3087 the start address of the overlay plus the size of the largest section.
3088
3089 Here is an example. Remember that this would appear inside a
3090 @code{SECTIONS} construct.
3091 @smallexample
3092 @group
3093 OVERLAY 0x1000 : AT (0x4000)
3094 @{
3095 .text0 @{ o1/*.o(.text) @}
3096 .text1 @{ o2/*.o(.text) @}
3097 @}
3098 @end group
3099 @end smallexample
3100 @noindent
3101 This will define both @samp{.text0} and @samp{.text1} to start at
3102 address 0x1000. @samp{.text0} will be loaded at address 0x4000, and
3103 @samp{.text1} will be loaded immediately after @samp{.text0}. The
3104 following symbols will be defined: @code{__load_start_text0},
3105 @code{__load_stop_text0}, @code{__load_start_text1},
3106 @code{__load_stop_text1}.
3107
3108 C code to copy overlay @code{.text1} into the overlay area might look
3109 like the following.
3110
3111 @smallexample
3112 @group
3113 extern char __load_start_text1, __load_stop_text1;
3114 memcpy ((char *) 0x1000, &__load_start_text1,
3115 &__load_stop_text1 - &__load_start_text1);
3116 @end group
3117 @end smallexample
3118
3119 Note that the @code{OVERLAY} command is just syntactic sugar, since
3120 everything it does can be done using the more basic commands. The above
3121 example could have been written identically as follows.
3122
3123 @smallexample
3124 @group
3125 .text0 0x1000 : AT (0x4000) @{ o1/*.o(.text) @}
3126 __load_start_text0 = LOADADDR (.text0);
3127 __load_stop_text0 = LOADADDR (.text0) + SIZEOF (.text0);
3128 .text1 0x1000 : AT (0x4000 + SIZEOF (.text0)) @{ o2/*.o(.text) @}
3129 __load_start_text1 = LOADADDR (.text1);
3130 __load_stop_text1 = LOADADDR (.text1) + SIZEOF (.text1);
3131 . = 0x1000 + MAX (SIZEOF (.text0), SIZEOF (.text1));
3132 @end group
3133 @end smallexample
3134
3135 @node MEMORY
3136 @section MEMORY command
3137 @kindex MEMORY
3138 @cindex memory regions
3139 @cindex regions of memory
3140 @cindex allocating memory
3141 @cindex discontinuous memory
3142 The linker's default configuration permits allocation of all available
3143 memory. You can override this by using the @code{MEMORY} command.
3144
3145 The @code{MEMORY} command describes the location and size of blocks of
3146 memory in the target. You can use it to describe which memory regions
3147 may be used by the linker, and which memory regions it must avoid. You
3148 can then assign sections to particular memory regions. The linker will
3149 set section addresses based on the memory regions, and will warn about
3150 regions that become too full. The linker will not shuffle sections
3151 around to fit into the available regions.
3152
3153 A linker script may contain at most one use of the @code{MEMORY}
3154 command. However, you can define as many blocks of memory within it as
3155 you wish. The syntax is:
3156 @smallexample
3157 @group
3158 MEMORY
3159 @{
3160 @var{name} [(@var{attr})] : ORIGIN = @var{origin}, LENGTH = @var{len}
3161 @dots{}
3162 @}
3163 @end group
3164 @end smallexample
3165
3166 The @var{name} is a name used in the linker script to refer to the
3167 region. The region name has no meaning outside of the linker script.
3168 Region names are stored in a separate name space, and will not conflict
3169 with symbol names, file names, or section names. Each memory region
3170 must have a distinct name.
3171
3172 @cindex memory region attributes
3173 The @var{attr} string is an optional list of attributes that specify
3174 whether to use a particular memory region for an input section which is
3175 not explicitly mapped in the linker script. As described in
3176 @ref{SECTIONS}, if you do not specify an output section for some input
3177 section, the linker will create an output section with the same name as
3178 the input section. If you define region attributes, the linker will use
3179 them to select the memory region for the output section that it creates.
3180
3181 The @var{attr} string must consist only of the following characters:
3182 @table @samp
3183 @item R
3184 Read-only section
3185 @item W
3186 Read/write section
3187 @item X
3188 Executable section
3189 @item A
3190 Allocatable section
3191 @item I
3192 Initialized section
3193 @item L
3194 Same as @samp{I}
3195 @item !
3196 Invert the sense of any of the preceding attributes
3197 @end table
3198
3199 If a unmapped section matches any of the listed attributes other than
3200 @samp{!}, it will be placed in the memory region. The @samp{!}
3201 attribute reverses this test, so that an unmapped section will be placed
3202 in the memory region only if it does not match any of the listed
3203 attributes.
3204
3205 @kindex ORIGIN =
3206 @kindex o =
3207 @kindex org =
3208 The @var{origin} is an expression for the start address of the memory
3209 region. The expression must evaluate to a constant before memory
3210 allocation is performed, which means that you may not use any section
3211 relative symbols. The keyword @code{ORIGIN} may be abbreviated to
3212 @code{org} or @code{o} (but not, for example, @code{ORG}).
3213
3214 @kindex LENGTH =
3215 @kindex len =
3216 @kindex l =
3217 The @var{len} is an expression for the size in bytes of the memory
3218 region. As with the @var{origin} expression, the expression must
3219 evaluate to a constant before memory allocation is performed. The
3220 keyword @code{LENGTH} may be abbreviated to @code{len} or @code{l}.
3221
3222 In the following example, we specify that there are two memory regions
3223 available for allocation: one starting at @samp{0} for 256 kilobytes,
3224 and the other starting at @samp{0x40000000} for four megabytes. The
3225 linker will place into the @samp{rom} memory region every section which
3226 is not explicitly mapped into a memory region, and is either read-only
3227 or executable. The linker will place other sections which are not
3228 explicitly mapped into a memory region into the @samp{ram} memory
3229 region.
3230
3231 @smallexample
3232 @group
3233 MEMORY
3234 @{
3235 rom (rx) : ORIGIN = 0, LENGTH = 256K
3236 ram (!rx) : org = 0x40000000, l = 4M
3237 @}
3238 @end group
3239 @end smallexample
3240
3241 Once you define a memory region, you can direct the linker to place
3242 specific output sections into that memory region by using the
3243 @samp{>@var{region}} output section attribute. For example, if you have
3244 a memory region named @samp{mem}, you would use @samp{>mem} in the
3245 output section definition. @xref{Output Section Region}. If no address
3246 was specified for the output section, the linker will set the address to
3247 the next available address within the memory region. If the combined
3248 output sections directed to a memory region are too large for the
3249 region, the linker will issue an error message.
3250
3251 @node PHDRS
3252 @section PHDRS Command
3253 @kindex PHDRS
3254 @cindex program headers
3255 @cindex ELF program headers
3256 @cindex program segments
3257 @cindex segments, ELF
3258 The ELF object file format uses @dfn{program headers}, also knows as
3259 @dfn{segments}. The program headers describe how the program should be
3260 loaded into memory. You can print them out by using the @code{objdump}
3261 program with the @samp{-p} option.
3262
3263 When you run an ELF program on a native ELF system, the system loader
3264 reads the program headers in order to figure out how to load the
3265 program. This will only work if the program headers are set correctly.
3266 This manual does not describe the details of how the system loader
3267 interprets program headers; for more information, see the ELF ABI.
3268
3269 The linker will create reasonable program headers by default. However,
3270 in some cases, you may need to specify the program headers more
3271 precisely. You may use the @code{PHDRS} command for this purpose. When
3272 the linker sees the @code{PHDRS} command in the linker script, it will
3273 not create any program headers other than the ones specified.
3274
3275 The linker only pays attention to the @code{PHDRS} command when
3276 generating an ELF output file. In other cases, the linker will simply
3277 ignore @code{PHDRS}.
3278
3279 This is the syntax of the @code{PHDRS} command. The words @code{PHDRS},
3280 @code{FILEHDR}, @code{AT}, and @code{FLAGS} are keywords.
3281
3282 @smallexample
3283 @group
3284 PHDRS
3285 @{
3286 @var{name} @var{type} [ FILEHDR ] [ PHDRS ] [ AT ( @var{address} ) ]
3287 [ FLAGS ( @var{flags} ) ] ;
3288 @}
3289 @end group
3290 @end smallexample
3291
3292 The @var{name} is used only for reference in the @code{SECTIONS} command
3293 of the linker script. It is not put into the output file. Program
3294 header names are stored in a separate name space, and will not conflict
3295 with symbol names, file names, or section names. Each program header
3296 must have a distinct name.
3297
3298 Certain program header types describe segments of memory which the
3299 system loader will load from the file. In the linker script, you
3300 specify the contents of these segments by placing allocatable output
3301 sections in the segments. You use the @samp{:@var{phdr}} output section
3302 attribute to place a section in a particular segment. @xref{Output
3303 Section Phdr}.
3304
3305 It is normal to put certain sections in more than one segment. This
3306 merely implies that one segment of memory contains another. You may
3307 repeat @samp{:@var{phdr}}, using it once for each segment which should
3308 contain the section.
3309
3310 If you place a section in one or more segments using @samp{:@var{phdr}},
3311 then the linker will place all subsequent allocatable sections which do
3312 not specify @samp{:@var{phdr}} in the same segments. This is for
3313 convenience, since generally a whole set of contiguous sections will be
3314 placed in a single segment. You can use @code{:NONE} to override the
3315 default segment and tell the linker to not put the section in any
3316 segment at all.
3317
3318 @kindex FILEHDR
3319 @kindex PHDRS
3320 You may use the @code{FILEHDR} and @code{PHDRS} keywords appear after
3321 the program header type to further describe the contents of the segment.
3322 The @code{FILEHDR} keyword means that the segment should include the ELF
3323 file header. The @code{PHDRS} keyword means that the segment should
3324 include the ELF program headers themselves.
3325
3326 The @var{type} may be one of the following. The numbers indicate the
3327 value of the keyword.
3328
3329 @table @asis
3330 @item @code{PT_NULL} (0)
3331 Indicates an unused program header.
3332
3333 @item @code{PT_LOAD} (1)
3334 Indicates that this program header describes a segment to be loaded from
3335 the file.
3336
3337 @item @code{PT_DYNAMIC} (2)
3338 Indicates a segment where dynamic linking information can be found.
3339
3340 @item @code{PT_INTERP} (3)
3341 Indicates a segment where the name of the program interpreter may be
3342 found.
3343
3344 @item @code{PT_NOTE} (4)
3345 Indicates a segment holding note information.
3346
3347 @item @code{PT_SHLIB} (5)
3348 A reserved program header type, defined but not specified by the ELF
3349 ABI.
3350
3351 @item @code{PT_PHDR} (6)
3352 Indicates a segment where the program headers may be found.
3353
3354 @item @var{expression}
3355 An expression giving the numeric type of the program header. This may
3356 be used for types not defined above.
3357 @end table
3358
3359 You can specify that a segment should be loaded at a particular address
3360 in memory by using an @code{AT} expression. This is identical to the
3361 @code{AT} command used as an output section attribute (@pxref{Output
3362 Section LMA}). The @code{AT} command for a program header overrides the
3363 output section attribute.
3364
3365 The linker will normally set the segment flags based on the sections
3366 which comprise the segment. You may use the @code{FLAGS} keyword to
3367 explicitly specify the segment flags. The value of @var{flags} must be
3368 an integer. It is used to set the @code{p_flags} field of the program
3369 header.
3370
3371 Here is an example of @code{PHDRS}. This shows a typical set of program
3372 headers used on a native ELF system.
3373
3374 @example
3375 @group
3376 PHDRS
3377 @{
3378 headers PT_PHDR PHDRS ;
3379 interp PT_INTERP ;
3380 text PT_LOAD FILEHDR PHDRS ;
3381 data PT_LOAD ;
3382 dynamic PT_DYNAMIC ;
3383 @}
3384
3385 SECTIONS
3386 @{
3387 . = SIZEOF_HEADERS;
3388 .interp : @{ *(.interp) @} :text :interp
3389 .text : @{ *(.text) @} :text
3390 .rodata : @{ *(.rodata) @} /* defaults to :text */
3391 @dots{}
3392 . = . + 0x1000; /* move to a new page in memory */
3393 .data : @{ *(.data) @} :data
3394 .dynamic : @{ *(.dynamic) @} :data :dynamic
3395 @dots{}
3396 @}
3397 @end group
3398 @end example
3399
3400 @node VERSION
3401 @section VERSION Command
3402 @kindex VERSION @{script text@}
3403 @cindex symbol versions
3404 @cindex version script
3405 @cindex versions of symbols
3406 The linker supports symbol versions when using ELF. Symbol versions are
3407 only useful when using shared libraries. The dynamic linker can use
3408 symbol versions to select a specific version of a function when it runs
3409 a program that may have been linked against an earlier version of the
3410 shared library.
3411
3412 You can include a version script directly in the main linker script, or
3413 you can supply the version script as an implicit linker script. You can
3414 also use the @samp{--version-script} linker option.
3415
3416 The syntax of the @code{VERSION} command is simply
3417 @smallexample
3418 VERSION @{ version-script-commands @}
3419 @end smallexample
3420
3421 The format of the version script commands is identical to that used by
3422 Sun's linker in Solaris 2.5. The version script defines a tree of
3423 version nodes. You specify the node names and interdependencies in the
3424 version script. You can specify which symbols are bound to which
3425 version nodes, and you can reduce a specified set of symbols to local
3426 scope so that they are not globally visible outside of the shared
3427 library.
3428
3429 The easiest way to demonstrate the version script language is with a few
3430 examples.
3431
3432 @smallexample
3433 VERS_1.1 @{
3434 global:
3435 foo1;
3436 local:
3437 old*;
3438 original*;
3439 new*;
3440 @};
3441
3442 VERS_1.2 @{
3443 foo2;
3444 @} VERS_1.1;
3445
3446 VERS_2.0 @{
3447 bar1; bar2;
3448 @} VERS_1.2;
3449 @end smallexample
3450
3451 This example version script defines three version nodes. The first
3452 version node defined is @samp{VERS_1.1}; it has no other dependencies.
3453 The script binds the symbol @samp{foo1} to @samp{VERS_1.1}. It reduces
3454 a number of symbols to local scope so that they are not visible outside
3455 of the shared library.
3456
3457 Next, the version script defines node @samp{VERS_1.2}. This node
3458 depends upon @samp{VERS_1.1}. The script binds the symbol @samp{foo2}
3459 to the version node @samp{VERS_1.2}.
3460
3461 Finally, the version script defines node @samp{VERS_2.0}. This node
3462 depends upon @samp{VERS_1.2}. The scripts binds the symbols @samp{bar1}
3463 and @samp{bar2} are bound to the version node @samp{VERS_2.0}.
3464
3465 When the linker finds a symbol defined in a library which is not
3466 specifically bound to a version node, it will effectively bind it to an
3467 unspecified base version of the library. You can bind all otherwise
3468 unspecified symbols to a given version node by using @samp{global: *}
3469 somewhere in the version script.
3470
3471 The names of the version nodes have no specific meaning other than what
3472 they might suggest to the person reading them. The @samp{2.0} version
3473 could just as well have appeared in between @samp{1.1} and @samp{1.2}.
3474 However, this would be a confusing way to write a version script.
3475
3476 When you link an application against a shared library that has versioned
3477 symbols, the application itself knows which version of each symbol it
3478 requires, and it also knows which version nodes it needs from each
3479 shared library it is linked against. Thus at runtime, the dynamic
3480 loader can make a quick check to make sure that the libraries you have
3481 linked against do in fact supply all of the version nodes that the
3482 application will need to resolve all of the dynamic symbols. In this
3483 way it is possible for the dynamic linker to know with certainty that
3484 all external symbols that it needs will be resolvable without having to
3485 search for each symbol reference.
3486
3487 The symbol versioning is in effect a much more sophisticated way of
3488 doing minor version checking that SunOS does. The fundamental problem
3489 that is being addressed here is that typically references to external
3490 functions are bound on an as-needed basis, and are not all bound when
3491 the application starts up. If a shared library is out of date, a
3492 required interface may be missing; when the application tries to use
3493 that interface, it may suddenly and unexpectedly fail. With symbol
3494 versioning, the user will get a warning when they start their program if
3495 the libraries being used with the application are too old.
3496
3497 There are several GNU extensions to Sun's versioning approach. The
3498 first of these is the ability to bind a symbol to a version node in the
3499 source file where the symbol is defined instead of in the versioning
3500 script. This was done mainly to reduce the burden on the library
3501 maintainer. You can do this by putting something like:
3502 @smallexample
3503 __asm__(".symver original_foo,foo@@VERS_1.1");
3504 @end smallexample
3505 @noindent
3506 in the C source file. This renames the function @samp{original_foo} to
3507 be an alias for @samp{foo} bound to the version node @samp{VERS_1.1}.
3508 The @samp{local:} directive can be used to prevent the symbol
3509 @samp{original_foo} from being exported.
3510
3511 The second GNU extension is to allow multiple versions of the same
3512 function to appear in a given shared library. In this way you can make
3513 an incompatible change to an interface without increasing the major
3514 version number of the shared library, while still allowing applications
3515 linked against the old interface to continue to function.
3516
3517 To do this, you must use multiple @samp{.symver} directives in the
3518 source file. Here is an example:
3519
3520 @smallexample
3521 __asm__(".symver original_foo,foo@@");
3522 __asm__(".symver old_foo,foo@@VERS_1.1");
3523 __asm__(".symver old_foo1,foo@@VERS_1.2");
3524 __asm__(".symver new_foo,foo@@@@VERS_2.0");
3525 @end smallexample
3526
3527 In this example, @samp{foo@@} represents the symbol @samp{foo} bound to the
3528 unspecified base version of the symbol. The source file that contains this
3529 example would define 4 C functions: @samp{original_foo}, @samp{old_foo},
3530 @samp{old_foo1}, and @samp{new_foo}.
3531
3532 When you have multiple definitions of a given symbol, there needs to be
3533 some way to specify a default version to which external references to
3534 this symbol will be bound. You can do this with the
3535 @samp{foo@@@@VERS_2.0} type of @samp{.symver} directive. You can only
3536 declare one version of a symbol as the default in this manner; otherwise
3537 you would effectively have multiple definitions of the same symbol.
3538
3539 If you wish to bind a reference to a specific version of the symbol
3540 within the shared library, you can use the aliases of convenience
3541 (i.e. @samp{old_foo}), or you can use the @samp{.symver} directive to
3542 specifically bind to an external version of the function in question.
3543
3544 You can also specify the language in the version script:
3545
3546 @smallexample
3547 VERSION extern "lang" @{ version-script-commands @}
3548 @end smallexample
3549
3550 The supported @samp{lang}s are @samp{C}, @samp{C++}, and @samp{Java}.
3551 The linker will iterate over the list of symbols at the link time and
3552 demangle them according to @samp{lang} before matching them to the
3553 patterns specified in @samp{version-script-commands}.
3554
3555 @node Expressions
3556 @section Expressions in Linker Scripts
3557 @cindex expressions
3558 @cindex arithmetic
3559 The syntax for expressions in the linker script language is identical to
3560 that of C expressions. All expressions are evaluated as integers. All
3561 expressions are evaluated in the same size, which is 32 bits if both the
3562 host and target are 32 bits, and is otherwise 64 bits.
3563
3564 You can use and set symbol values in expressions.
3565
3566 The linker defines several special purpose builtin functions for use in
3567 expressions.
3568
3569 @menu
3570 * Constants:: Constants
3571 * Symbols:: Symbol Names
3572 * Location Counter:: The Location Counter
3573 * Operators:: Operators
3574 * Evaluation:: Evaluation
3575 * Expression Section:: The Section of an Expression
3576 * Builtin Functions:: Builtin Functions
3577 @end menu
3578
3579 @node Constants
3580 @subsection Constants
3581 @cindex integer notation
3582 @cindex constants in linker scripts
3583 All constants are integers.
3584
3585 As in C, the linker considers an integer beginning with @samp{0} to be
3586 octal, and an integer beginning with @samp{0x} or @samp{0X} to be
3587 hexadecimal. The linker considers other integers to be decimal.
3588
3589 @cindex scaled integers
3590 @cindex K and M integer suffixes
3591 @cindex M and K integer suffixes
3592 @cindex suffixes for integers
3593 @cindex integer suffixes
3594 In addition, you can use the suffixes @code{K} and @code{M} to scale a
3595 constant by
3596 @c TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3597 @ifinfo
3598 @c END TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3599 @code{1024} or @code{1024*1024}
3600 @c TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3601 @end ifinfo
3602 @tex
3603 ${\rm 1024}$ or ${\rm 1024}^2$
3604 @end tex
3605 @c END TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3606 respectively. For example, the following all refer to the same quantity:
3607 @smallexample
3608 _fourk_1 = 4K;
3609 _fourk_2 = 4096;
3610 _fourk_3 = 0x1000;
3611 @end smallexample
3612
3613 @node Symbols
3614 @subsection Symbol Names
3615 @cindex symbol names
3616 @cindex names
3617 @cindex quoted symbol names
3618 @kindex "
3619 Unless quoted, symbol names start with a letter, underscore, or period
3620 and may include letters, digits, underscores, periods, and hyphens.
3621 Unquoted symbol names must not conflict with any keywords. You can
3622 specify a symbol which contains odd characters or has the same name as a
3623 keyword by surrounding the symbol name in double quotes:
3624 @smallexample
3625 "SECTION" = 9;
3626 "with a space" = "also with a space" + 10;
3627 @end smallexample
3628
3629 Since symbols can contain many non-alphabetic characters, it is safest
3630 to delimit symbols with spaces. For example, @samp{A-B} is one symbol,
3631 whereas @samp{A - B} is an expression involving subtraction.
3632
3633 @node Location Counter
3634 @subsection The Location Counter
3635 @kindex .
3636 @cindex dot
3637 @cindex location counter
3638 @cindex current output location
3639 The special linker variable @dfn{dot} @samp{.} always contains the
3640 current output location counter. Since the @code{.} always refers to a
3641 location in an output section, it may only appear in an expression
3642 within a @code{SECTIONS} command. The @code{.} symbol may appear
3643 anywhere that an ordinary symbol is allowed in an expression.
3644
3645 @cindex holes
3646 Assigning a value to @code{.} will cause the location counter to be
3647 moved. This may be used to create holes in the output section. The
3648 location counter may never be moved backwards.
3649
3650 @smallexample
3651 SECTIONS
3652 @{
3653 output :
3654 @{
3655 file1(.text)
3656 . = . + 1000;
3657 file2(.text)
3658 . += 1000;
3659 file3(.text)
3660 @} = 0x1234;
3661 @}
3662 @end smallexample
3663 @noindent
3664 In the previous example, the @samp{.text} section from @file{file1} is
3665 located at the beginning of the output section @samp{output}. It is
3666 followed by a 1000 byte gap. Then the @samp{.text} section from
3667 @file{file2} appears, also with a 1000 byte gap following before the
3668 @samp{.text} section from @file{file3}. The notation @samp{= 0x1234}
3669 specifies what data to write in the gaps (@pxref{Output Section Fill}).
3670
3671 @cindex dot inside sections
3672 Note: @code{.} actually refers to the byte offset from the start of the
3673 current containing object. Normally this is the @code{SECTIONS}
3674 statement, whoes start address is 0, hence @code{.} can be used as an
3675 absolute address. If @code{.} is used inside a section description
3676 however, it refers to the byte offset from the start of that section,
3677 not an absolute address. Thus in a script like this:
3678
3679 @smallexample
3680 SECTIONS
3681 @{
3682 . = 0x100
3683 .text: @{
3684 *(.text)
3685 . = 0x200
3686 @}
3687 . = 0x500
3688 .data: @{
3689 *(.data)
3690 . += 0x600
3691 @}
3692 @}
3693 @end smallexample
3694
3695 The @samp{.text} section will be assigned a starting address of 0x100
3696 and a size of exactly 0x200 bytes, even if there is not enough data in
3697 the @samp{.text} input sections to fill this area. (If there is too
3698 much data, an error will be produced because this would be an attempt to
3699 move @code{.} backwards). The @samp{.data} section will start at 0x500
3700 and it will have an extra 0x600 bytes worth of space after the end of
3701 the values from the @samp{.data} input sections and before the end of
3702 the @samp{.data} output section itself.
3703
3704 @need 2000
3705 @node Operators
3706 @subsection Operators
3707 @cindex operators for arithmetic
3708 @cindex arithmetic operators
3709 @cindex precedence in expressions
3710 The linker recognizes the standard C set of arithmetic operators, with
3711 the standard bindings and precedence levels:
3712 @c TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3713 @ifinfo
3714 @c END TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3715 @smallexample
3716 precedence associativity Operators Notes
3717 (highest)
3718 1 left ! - ~ (1)
3719 2 left * / %
3720 3 left + -
3721 4 left >> <<
3722 5 left == != > < <= >=
3723 6 left &
3724 7 left |
3725 8 left &&
3726 9 left ||
3727 10 right ? :
3728 11 right &= += -= *= /= (2)
3729 (lowest)
3730 @end smallexample
3731 Notes:
3732 (1) Prefix operators
3733 (2) @xref{Assignments}.
3734 @c TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3735 @end ifinfo
3736 @tex
3737 \vskip \baselineskip
3738 %"lispnarrowing" is the extra indent used generally for smallexample
3739 \hskip\lispnarrowing\vbox{\offinterlineskip
3740 \hrule
3741 \halign
3742 {\vrule#&\strut\hfil\ #\ \hfil&\vrule#&\strut\hfil\ #\ \hfil&\vrule#&\strut\hfil\ {\tt #}\ \hfil&\vrule#\cr
3743 height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr
3744 &Precedence&& Associativity &&{\rm Operators}&\cr
3745 height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr
3746 \noalign{\hrule}
3747 height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr
3748 &highest&&&&&\cr
3749 % '176 is tilde, '~' in tt font
3750 &1&&left&&\qquad- \char'176\ !\qquad\dag&\cr
3751 &2&&left&&* / \%&\cr
3752 &3&&left&&+ -&\cr
3753 &4&&left&&>> <<&\cr
3754 &5&&left&&== != > < <= >=&\cr
3755 &6&&left&&\&&\cr
3756 &7&&left&&|&\cr
3757 &8&&left&&{\&\&}&\cr
3758 &9&&left&&||&\cr
3759 &10&&right&&? :&\cr
3760 &11&&right&&\qquad\&= += -= *= /=\qquad\ddag&\cr
3761 &lowest&&&&&\cr
3762 height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr}
3763 \hrule}
3764 @end tex
3765 @iftex
3766 {
3767 @obeylines@parskip=0pt@parindent=0pt
3768 @dag@quad Prefix operators.
3769 @ddag@quad @xref{Assignments}.
3770 }
3771 @end iftex
3772 @c END TEXI2ROFF-KILL
3773
3774 @node Evaluation
3775 @subsection Evaluation
3776 @cindex lazy evaluation
3777 @cindex expression evaluation order
3778 The linker evaluates expressions lazily. It only computes the value of
3779 an expression when absolutely necessary.
3780
3781 The linker needs some information, such as the value of the start
3782 address of the first section, and the origins and lengths of memory
3783 regions, in order to do any linking at all. These values are computed
3784 as soon as possible when the linker reads in the linker script.
3785
3786 However, other values (such as symbol values) are not known or needed
3787 until after storage allocation. Such values are evaluated later, when
3788 other information (such as the sizes of output sections) is available
3789 for use in the symbol assignment expression.
3790
3791 The sizes of sections cannot be known until after allocation, so
3792 assignments dependent upon these are not performed until after
3793 allocation.
3794
3795 Some expressions, such as those depending upon the location counter
3796 @samp{.}, must be evaluated during section allocation.
3797
3798 If the result of an expression is required, but the value is not
3799 available, then an error results. For example, a script like the
3800 following
3801 @smallexample
3802 @group
3803 SECTIONS
3804 @{
3805 .text 9+this_isnt_constant :
3806 @{ *(.text) @}
3807 @}
3808 @end group
3809 @end smallexample
3810 @noindent
3811 will cause the error message @samp{non constant expression for initial
3812 address}.
3813
3814 @node Expression Section
3815 @subsection The Section of an Expression
3816 @cindex expression sections
3817 @cindex absolute expressions
3818 @cindex relative expressions
3819 @cindex absolute and relocatable symbols
3820 @cindex relocatable and absolute symbols
3821 @cindex symbols, relocatable and absolute
3822 When the linker evaluates an expression, the result is either absolute
3823 or relative to some section. A relative expression is expressed as a
3824 fixed offset from the base of a section.
3825
3826 The position of the expression within the linker script determines
3827 whether it is absolute or relative. An expression which appears within
3828 an output section definition is relative to the base of the output
3829 section. An expression which appears elsewhere will be absolute.
3830
3831 A symbol set to a relative expression will be relocatable if you request
3832 relocatable output using the @samp{-r} option. That means that a
3833 further link operation may change the value of the symbol. The symbol's
3834 section will be the section of the relative expression.
3835
3836 A symbol set to an absolute expression will retain the same value
3837 through any further link operation. The symbol will be absolute, and
3838 will not have any particular associated section.
3839
3840 You can use the builtin function @code{ABSOLUTE} to force an expression
3841 to be absolute when it would otherwise be relative. For example, to
3842 create an absolute symbol set to the address of the end of the output
3843 section @samp{.data}:
3844 @smallexample
3845 SECTIONS
3846 @{
3847 .data : @{ *(.data) _edata = ABSOLUTE(.); @}
3848 @}
3849 @end smallexample
3850 @noindent
3851 If @samp{ABSOLUTE} were not used, @samp{_edata} would be relative to the
3852 @samp{.data} section.
3853
3854 @node Builtin Functions
3855 @subsection Builtin Functions
3856 @cindex functions in expressions
3857 The linker script language includes a number of builtin functions for
3858 use in linker script expressions.
3859
3860 @table @code
3861 @item ABSOLUTE(@var{exp})
3862 @kindex ABSOLUTE(@var{exp})
3863 @cindex expression, absolute
3864 Return the absolute (non-relocatable, as opposed to non-negative) value
3865 of the expression @var{exp}. Primarily useful to assign an absolute
3866 value to a symbol within a section definition, where symbol values are
3867 normally section relative. @xref{Expression Section}.
3868
3869 @item ADDR(@var{section})
3870 @kindex ADDR(@var{section})
3871 @cindex section address in expression
3872 Return the absolute address (the VMA) of the named @var{section}. Your
3873 script must previously have defined the location of that section. In
3874 the following example, @code{symbol_1} and @code{symbol_2} are assigned
3875 identical values:
3876 @smallexample
3877 @group
3878 SECTIONS @{ @dots{}
3879 .output1 :
3880 @{
3881 start_of_output_1 = ABSOLUTE(.);
3882 @dots{}
3883 @}
3884 .output :
3885 @{
3886 symbol_1 = ADDR(.output1);
3887 symbol_2 = start_of_output_1;
3888 @}
3889 @dots{} @}
3890 @end group
3891 @end smallexample
3892
3893 @item ALIGN(@var{exp})
3894 @kindex ALIGN(@var{exp})
3895 @cindex round up location counter
3896 @cindex align location counter
3897 Return the location counter (@code{.}) aligned to the next @var{exp}
3898 boundary. @var{exp} must be an expression whose value is a power of
3899 two. This is equivalent to
3900 @smallexample
3901 (. + @var{exp} - 1) & ~(@var{exp} - 1)
3902 @end smallexample
3903
3904 @code{ALIGN} doesn't change the value of the location counter---it just
3905 does arithmetic on it. Here is an example which aligns the output
3906 @code{.data} section to the next @code{0x2000} byte boundary after the
3907 preceding section and sets a variable within the section to the next
3908 @code{0x8000} boundary after the input sections:
3909 @smallexample
3910 @group
3911 SECTIONS @{ @dots{}
3912 .data ALIGN(0x2000): @{
3913 *(.data)
3914 variable = ALIGN(0x8000);
3915 @}
3916 @dots{} @}
3917 @end group
3918 @end smallexample
3919 @noindent
3920 The first use of @code{ALIGN} in this example specifies the location of
3921 a section because it is used as the optional @var{address} attribute of
3922 a section definition (@pxref{Output Section Address}). The second use
3923 of @code{ALIGN} is used to defines the value of a symbol.
3924
3925 The builtin function @code{NEXT} is closely related to @code{ALIGN}.
3926
3927 @item BLOCK(@var{exp})
3928 @kindex BLOCK(@var{exp})
3929 This is a synonym for @code{ALIGN}, for compatibility with older linker
3930 scripts. It is most often seen when setting the address of an output
3931 section.
3932
3933 @item DEFINED(@var{symbol})
3934 @kindex DEFINED(@var{symbol})
3935 @cindex symbol defaults
3936 Return 1 if @var{symbol} is in the linker global symbol table and is
3937 defined, otherwise return 0. You can use this function to provide
3938 default values for symbols. For example, the following script fragment
3939 shows how to set a global symbol @samp{begin} to the first location in
3940 the @samp{.text} section---but if a symbol called @samp{begin} already
3941 existed, its value is preserved:
3942
3943 @smallexample
3944 @group
3945 SECTIONS @{ @dots{}
3946 .text : @{
3947 begin = DEFINED(begin) ? begin : . ;
3948 @dots{}
3949 @}
3950 @dots{}
3951 @}
3952 @end group
3953 @end smallexample
3954
3955 @item LOADADDR(@var{section})
3956 @kindex LOADADDR(@var{section})
3957 @cindex section load address in expression
3958 Return the absolute LMA of the named @var{section}. This is normally
3959 the same as @code{ADDR}, but it may be different if the @code{AT}
3960 attribute is used in the output section definition (@pxref{Output
3961 Section LMA}).
3962
3963 @kindex MAX
3964 @item MAX(@var{exp1}, @var{exp2})
3965 Returns the maximum of @var{exp1} and @var{exp2}.
3966
3967 @kindex MIN
3968 @item MIN(@var{exp1}, @var{exp2})
3969 Returns the minimum of @var{exp1} and @var{exp2}.
3970
3971 @item NEXT(@var{exp})
3972 @kindex NEXT(@var{exp})
3973 @cindex unallocated address, next
3974 Return the next unallocated address that is a multiple of @var{exp}.
3975 This function is closely related to @code{ALIGN(@var{exp})}; unless you
3976 use the @code{MEMORY} command to define discontinuous memory for the
3977 output file, the two functions are equivalent.
3978
3979 @item SIZEOF(@var{section})
3980 @kindex SIZEOF(@var{section})
3981 @cindex section size
3982 Return the size in bytes of the named @var{section}, if that section has
3983 been allocated. If the section has not been allocated when this is
3984 evaluated, the linker will report an error. In the following example,
3985 @code{symbol_1} and @code{symbol_2} are assigned identical values:
3986 @smallexample
3987 @group
3988 SECTIONS@{ @dots{}
3989 .output @{
3990 .start = . ;
3991 @dots{}
3992 .end = . ;
3993 @}
3994 symbol_1 = .end - .start ;
3995 symbol_2 = SIZEOF(.output);
3996 @dots{} @}
3997 @end group
3998 @end smallexample
3999
4000 @item SIZEOF_HEADERS
4001 @itemx sizeof_headers
4002 @kindex SIZEOF_HEADERS
4003 @cindex header size
4004 Return the size in bytes of the output file's headers. This is
4005 information which appears at the start of the output file. You can use
4006 this number when setting the start address of the first section, if you
4007 choose, to facilitate paging.
4008
4009 @cindex not enough room for program headers
4010 @cindex program headers, not enough room
4011 When producing an ELF output file, if the linker script uses the
4012 @code{SIZEOF_HEADERS} builtin function, the linker must compute the
4013 number of program headers before it has determined all the section
4014 addresses and sizes. If the linker later discovers that it needs
4015 additional program headers, it will report an error @samp{not enough
4016 room for program headers}. To avoid this error, you must avoid using
4017 the @code{SIZEOF_HEADERS} function, or you must rework your linker
4018 script to avoid forcing the linker to use additional program headers, or
4019 you must define the program headers yourself using the @code{PHDRS}
4020 command (@pxref{PHDRS}).
4021 @end table
4022
4023 @node Implicit Linker Scripts
4024 @section Implicit Linker Scripts
4025 @cindex implicit linker scripts
4026 If you specify a linker input file which the linker can not recognize as
4027 an object file or an archive file, it will try to read the file as a
4028 linker script. If the file can not be parsed as a linker script, the
4029 linker will report an error.
4030
4031 An implicit linker script will not replace the default linker script.
4032
4033 Typically an implicit linker script would contain only symbol
4034 assignments, or the @code{INPUT}, @code{GROUP}, or @code{VERSION}
4035 commands.
4036
4037 Any input files read because of an implicit linker script will be read
4038 at the position in the command line where the implicit linker script was
4039 read. This can affect archive searching.
4040
4041 @ifset GENERIC
4042 @node Machine Dependent
4043 @chapter Machine Dependent Features
4044
4045 @cindex machine dependencies
4046 @code{ld} has additional features on some platforms; the following
4047 sections describe them. Machines where @code{ld} has no additional
4048 functionality are not listed.
4049
4050 @menu
4051 * H8/300:: @code{ld} and the H8/300
4052 * i960:: @code{ld} and the Intel 960 family
4053 * ARM:: @code{ld} and the ARM family
4054 * HPPA ELF32:: @code{ld} and HPPA 32-bit ELF
4055 @ifset TICOFF
4056 * TI COFF:: @code{ld} and TI COFF
4057 @end ifset
4058 @end menu
4059 @end ifset
4060
4061 @c FIXME! This could use @raisesections/@lowersections, but there seems to be a conflict
4062 @c between those and node-defaulting.
4063 @ifset H8300
4064 @ifclear GENERIC
4065 @raisesections
4066 @end ifclear
4067
4068 @node H8/300
4069 @section @code{ld} and the H8/300
4070
4071 @cindex H8/300 support
4072 For the H8/300, @code{ld} can perform these global optimizations when
4073 you specify the @samp{--relax} command-line option.
4074
4075 @table @emph
4076 @cindex relaxing on H8/300
4077 @item relaxing address modes
4078 @code{ld} finds all @code{jsr} and @code{jmp} instructions whose
4079 targets are within eight bits, and turns them into eight-bit
4080 program-counter relative @code{bsr} and @code{bra} instructions,
4081 respectively.
4082
4083 @cindex synthesizing on H8/300
4084 @item synthesizing instructions
4085 @c FIXME: specifically mov.b, or any mov instructions really?
4086 @code{ld} finds all @code{mov.b} instructions which use the
4087 sixteen-bit absolute address form, but refer to the top
4088 page of memory, and changes them to use the eight-bit address form.
4089 (That is: the linker turns @samp{mov.b @code{@@}@var{aa}:16} into
4090 @samp{mov.b @code{@@}@var{aa}:8} whenever the address @var{aa} is in the
4091 top page of memory).
4092 @end table
4093
4094 @ifclear GENERIC
4095 @lowersections
4096 @end ifclear
4097 @end ifset
4098
4099 @ifclear GENERIC
4100 @ifset Hitachi
4101 @c This stuff is pointless to say unless you're especially concerned
4102 @c with Hitachi chips; don't enable it for generic case, please.
4103 @node Hitachi
4104 @chapter @code{ld} and other Hitachi chips
4105
4106 @code{ld} also supports the H8/300H, the H8/500, and the Hitachi SH. No
4107 special features, commands, or command-line options are required for
4108 these chips.
4109 @end ifset
4110 @end ifclear
4111
4112 @ifset I960
4113 @ifclear GENERIC
4114 @raisesections
4115 @end ifclear
4116
4117 @node i960
4118 @section @code{ld} and the Intel 960 family
4119
4120 @cindex i960 support
4121
4122 You can use the @samp{-A@var{architecture}} command line option to
4123 specify one of the two-letter names identifying members of the 960
4124 family; the option specifies the desired output target, and warns of any
4125 incompatible instructions in the input files. It also modifies the
4126 linker's search strategy for archive libraries, to support the use of
4127 libraries specific to each particular architecture, by including in the
4128 search loop names suffixed with the string identifying the architecture.
4129
4130 For example, if your @code{ld} command line included @w{@samp{-ACA}} as
4131 well as @w{@samp{-ltry}}, the linker would look (in its built-in search
4132 paths, and in any paths you specify with @samp{-L}) for a library with
4133 the names
4134
4135 @smallexample
4136 @group
4137 try
4138 libtry.a
4139 tryca
4140 libtryca.a
4141 @end group
4142 @end smallexample
4143
4144 @noindent
4145 The first two possibilities would be considered in any event; the last
4146 two are due to the use of @w{@samp{-ACA}}.
4147
4148 You can meaningfully use @samp{-A} more than once on a command line, since
4149 the 960 architecture family allows combination of target architectures; each
4150 use will add another pair of name variants to search for when @w{@samp{-l}}
4151 specifies a library.
4152
4153 @cindex @code{--relax} on i960
4154 @cindex relaxing on i960
4155 @code{ld} supports the @samp{--relax} option for the i960 family. If
4156 you specify @samp{--relax}, @code{ld} finds all @code{balx} and
4157 @code{calx} instructions whose targets are within 24 bits, and turns
4158 them into 24-bit program-counter relative @code{bal} and @code{cal}
4159 instructions, respectively. @code{ld} also turns @code{cal}
4160 instructions into @code{bal} instructions when it determines that the
4161 target subroutine is a leaf routine (that is, the target subroutine does
4162 not itself call any subroutines).
4163
4164 @ifclear GENERIC
4165 @lowersections
4166 @end ifclear
4167 @end ifset
4168
4169 @ifclear GENERIC
4170 @raisesections
4171 @end ifclear
4172
4173 @node ARM
4174 @section @code{ld}'s support for interworking between ARM and Thumb code
4175
4176 @cindex ARM interworking support
4177 @kindex --support-old-code
4178 For the ARM, @code{ld} will generate code stubs to allow functions calls
4179 betweem ARM and Thumb code. These stubs only work with code that has
4180 been compiled and assembled with the @samp{-mthumb-interwork} command
4181 line option. If it is necessary to link with old ARM object files or
4182 libraries, which have not been compiled with the -mthumb-interwork
4183 option then the @samp{--support-old-code} command line switch should be
4184 given to the linker. This will make it generate larger stub functions
4185 which will work with non-interworking aware ARM code. Note, however,
4186 the linker does not support generating stubs for function calls to
4187 non-interworking aware Thumb code.
4188
4189 @cindex thumb entry point
4190 @cindex entry point, thumb
4191 @kindex --thumb-entry=@var{entry}
4192 The @samp{--thumb-entry} switch is a duplicate of the generic
4193 @samp{--entry} switch, in that it sets the program's starting address.
4194 But it also sets the bottom bit of the address, so that it can be
4195 branched to using a BX instruction, and the program will start
4196 executing in Thumb mode straight away.
4197
4198 @node HPPA ELF32
4199 @section @code{ld} and HPPA 32-bit ELF support
4200 @cindex HPPA multiple sub-space stubs
4201 @kindex --multi-subspace
4202 When generating a shared library, @code{ld} will by default generate
4203 import stubs suitable for use with a single sub-space application.
4204 The @samp{--multi-subspace} switch causes @code{ld} to generate export
4205 stubs, and different (larger) import stubs suitable for use with
4206 multiple sub-spaces.
4207
4208 @cindex HPPA stub grouping
4209 @kindex --stub-group-size=@var{N}
4210 Long branch stubs and import/export stubs are placed by @code{ld} in
4211 stub sections located between groups of input sections.
4212 @samp{--stub-group-size} specifies the maximum size of a group of input
4213 sections handled by one stub section. Since branch offsets are signed,
4214 a stub section may serve two groups of input sections, one group before
4215 the stub section, and one group after it. However, when using
4216 conditional branches that require stubs, it may be better (for branch
4217 prediction) that stub sections only serve one group of input sections.
4218 A negative value for @samp{N} chooses this scheme, ensuring that
4219 branches to stubs always use a negative offset. Two special values of
4220 @samp{N} are recognized, @samp{1} and @samp{-1}. These both instruct
4221 @code{ld} to automatically size input section groups for the branch types
4222 detected, with the same behaviour regarding stub placement as other
4223 positive or negative values of @samp{N} respectively.
4224
4225 Note that @samp{--stub-group-size} does not split input sections. A
4226 single input section larger than the group size specified will of course
4227 create a larger group (of one section). If input sections are too
4228 large, it may not be possible for a branch to reach its stub.
4229
4230 @ifset TICOFF
4231 @node TI COFF
4232 @section @code{ld}'s support for various TI COFF versions
4233 @cindex TI COFF versions
4234 @kindex --format=@var{version}
4235 The @samp{--format} switch allows selection of one of the various
4236 TI COFF versions. The latest of this writing is 2; versions 0 and 1 are
4237 also supported. The TI COFF versions also vary in header byte-order
4238 format; @code{ld} will read any version or byte order, but the output
4239 header format depends on the default specified by the specific target.
4240 @end ifset
4241
4242 @ifclear GENERIC
4243 @lowersections
4244 @end ifclear
4245
4246 @ifclear SingleFormat
4247 @node BFD
4248 @chapter BFD
4249
4250 @cindex back end
4251 @cindex object file management
4252 @cindex object formats available
4253 @kindex objdump -i
4254 The linker accesses object and archive files using the BFD libraries.
4255 These libraries allow the linker to use the same routines to operate on
4256 object files whatever the object file format. A different object file
4257 format can be supported simply by creating a new BFD back end and adding
4258 it to the library. To conserve runtime memory, however, the linker and
4259 associated tools are usually configured to support only a subset of the
4260 object file formats available. You can use @code{objdump -i}
4261 (@pxref{objdump,,objdump,binutils.info,The GNU Binary Utilities}) to
4262 list all the formats available for your configuration.
4263
4264 @cindex BFD requirements
4265 @cindex requirements for BFD
4266 As with most implementations, BFD is a compromise between
4267 several conflicting requirements. The major factor influencing
4268 BFD design was efficiency: any time used converting between
4269 formats is time which would not have been spent had BFD not
4270 been involved. This is partly offset by abstraction payback; since
4271 BFD simplifies applications and back ends, more time and care
4272 may be spent optimizing algorithms for a greater speed.
4273
4274 One minor artifact of the BFD solution which you should bear in
4275 mind is the potential for information loss. There are two places where
4276 useful information can be lost using the BFD mechanism: during
4277 conversion and during output. @xref{BFD information loss}.
4278
4279 @menu
4280 * BFD outline:: How it works: an outline of BFD
4281 @end menu
4282
4283 @node BFD outline
4284 @section How it works: an outline of BFD
4285 @cindex opening object files
4286 @include bfdsumm.texi
4287 @end ifclear
4288
4289 @node Reporting Bugs
4290 @chapter Reporting Bugs
4291 @cindex bugs in @code{ld}
4292 @cindex reporting bugs in @code{ld}
4293
4294 Your bug reports play an essential role in making @code{ld} reliable.
4295
4296 Reporting a bug may help you by bringing a solution to your problem, or
4297 it may not. But in any case the principal function of a bug report is
4298 to help the entire community by making the next version of @code{ld}
4299 work better. Bug reports are your contribution to the maintenance of
4300 @code{ld}.
4301
4302 In order for a bug report to serve its purpose, you must include the
4303 information that enables us to fix the bug.
4304
4305 @menu
4306 * Bug Criteria:: Have you found a bug?
4307 * Bug Reporting:: How to report bugs
4308 @end menu
4309
4310 @node Bug Criteria
4311 @section Have you found a bug?
4312 @cindex bug criteria
4313
4314 If you are not sure whether you have found a bug, here are some guidelines:
4315
4316 @itemize @bullet
4317 @cindex fatal signal
4318 @cindex linker crash
4319 @cindex crash of linker
4320 @item
4321 If the linker gets a fatal signal, for any input whatever, that is a
4322 @code{ld} bug. Reliable linkers never crash.
4323
4324 @cindex error on valid input
4325 @item
4326 If @code{ld} produces an error message for valid input, that is a bug.
4327
4328 @cindex invalid input
4329 @item
4330 If @code{ld} does not produce an error message for invalid input, that
4331 may be a bug. In the general case, the linker can not verify that
4332 object files are correct.
4333
4334 @item
4335 If you are an experienced user of linkers, your suggestions for
4336 improvement of @code{ld} are welcome in any case.
4337 @end itemize
4338
4339 @node Bug Reporting
4340 @section How to report bugs
4341 @cindex bug reports
4342 @cindex @code{ld} bugs, reporting
4343
4344 A number of companies and individuals offer support for @sc{gnu}
4345 products. If you obtained @code{ld} from a support organization, we
4346 recommend you contact that organization first.
4347
4348 You can find contact information for many support companies and
4349 individuals in the file @file{etc/SERVICE} in the @sc{gnu} Emacs
4350 distribution.
4351
4352 Otherwise, send bug reports for @code{ld} to
4353 @samp{bug-binutils@@gnu.org}.
4354
4355 The fundamental principle of reporting bugs usefully is this:
4356 @strong{report all the facts}. If you are not sure whether to state a
4357 fact or leave it out, state it!
4358
4359 Often people omit facts because they think they know what causes the
4360 problem and assume that some details do not matter. Thus, you might
4361 assume that the name of a symbol you use in an example does not matter.
4362 Well, probably it does not, but one cannot be sure. Perhaps the bug is
4363 a stray memory reference which happens to fetch from the location where
4364 that name is stored in memory; perhaps, if the name were different, the
4365 contents of that location would fool the linker into doing the right
4366 thing despite the bug. Play it safe and give a specific, complete
4367 example. That is the easiest thing for you to do, and the most helpful.
4368
4369 Keep in mind that the purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the bug if
4370 it is new to us. Therefore, always write your bug reports on the assumption
4371 that the bug has not been reported previously.
4372
4373 Sometimes people give a few sketchy facts and ask, ``Does this ring a
4374 bell?'' Those bug reports are useless, and we urge everyone to
4375 @emph{refuse to respond to them} except to chide the sender to report
4376 bugs properly.
4377
4378 To enable us to fix the bug, you should include all these things:
4379
4380 @itemize @bullet
4381 @item
4382 The version of @code{ld}. @code{ld} announces it if you start it with
4383 the @samp{--version} argument.
4384
4385 Without this, we will not know whether there is any point in looking for
4386 the bug in the current version of @code{ld}.
4387
4388 @item
4389 Any patches you may have applied to the @code{ld} source, including any
4390 patches made to the @code{BFD} library.
4391
4392 @item
4393 The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and
4394 version number.
4395
4396 @item
4397 What compiler (and its version) was used to compile @code{ld}---e.g.
4398 ``@code{gcc-2.7}''.
4399
4400 @item
4401 The command arguments you gave the linker to link your example and
4402 observe the bug. To guarantee you will not omit something important,
4403 list them all. A copy of the Makefile (or the output from make) is
4404 sufficient.
4405
4406 If we were to try to guess the arguments, we would probably guess wrong
4407 and then we might not encounter the bug.
4408
4409 @item
4410 A complete input file, or set of input files, that will reproduce the
4411 bug. It is generally most helpful to send the actual object files,
4412 uuencoded if necessary to get them through the mail system. Making them
4413 available for anonymous FTP is not as good, but may be the only
4414 reasonable choice for large object files.
4415
4416 If the source files were assembled using @code{gas} or compiled using
4417 @code{gcc}, then it may be OK to send the source files rather than the
4418 object files. In this case, be sure to say exactly what version of
4419 @code{gas} or @code{gcc} was used to produce the object files. Also say
4420 how @code{gas} or @code{gcc} were configured.
4421
4422 @item
4423 A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is
4424 incorrect. For example, ``It gets a fatal signal.''
4425
4426 Of course, if the bug is that @code{ld} gets a fatal signal, then we
4427 will certainly notice it. But if the bug is incorrect output, we might
4428 not notice unless it is glaringly wrong. You might as well not give us
4429 a chance to make a mistake.
4430
4431 Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still
4432 say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as, your
4433 copy of @code{ld} is out of synch, or you have encountered a bug in the
4434 C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might crash
4435 and ours would not. If you told us to expect a crash, then when ours
4436 fails to crash, we would know that the bug was not happening for us. If
4437 you had not told us to expect a crash, then we would not be able to draw
4438 any conclusion from our observations.
4439
4440 @item
4441 If you wish to suggest changes to the @code{ld} source, send us context
4442 diffs, as generated by @code{diff} with the @samp{-u}, @samp{-c}, or
4443 @samp{-p} option. Always send diffs from the old file to the new file.
4444 If you even discuss something in the @code{ld} source, refer to it by
4445 context, not by line number.
4446
4447 The line numbers in our development sources will not match those in your
4448 sources. Your line numbers would convey no useful information to us.
4449 @end itemize
4450
4451 Here are some things that are not necessary:
4452
4453 @itemize @bullet
4454 @item
4455 A description of the envelope of the bug.
4456
4457 Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating
4458 which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which
4459 changes will not affect it.
4460
4461 This is often time consuming and not very useful, because the way we
4462 will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger
4463 with breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples.
4464 We recommend that you save your time for something else.
4465
4466 Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead}
4467 of the original one, that is a convenience for us. Errors in the
4468 output will be easier to spot, running under the debugger will take
4469 less time, and so on.
4470
4471 However, simplification is not vital; if you do not want to do this,
4472 report the bug anyway and send us the entire test case you used.
4473
4474 @item
4475 A patch for the bug.
4476
4477 A patch for the bug does help us if it is a good one. But do not omit
4478 the necessary information, such as the test case, on the assumption that
4479 a patch is all we need. We might see problems with your patch and decide
4480 to fix the problem another way, or we might not understand it at all.
4481
4482 Sometimes with a program as complicated as @code{ld} it is very hard to
4483 construct an example that will make the program follow a certain path
4484 through the code. If you do not send us the example, we will not be
4485 able to construct one, so we will not be able to verify that the bug is
4486 fixed.
4487
4488 And if we cannot understand what bug you are trying to fix, or why your
4489 patch should be an improvement, we will not install it. A test case will
4490 help us to understand.
4491
4492 @item
4493 A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on.
4494
4495 Such guesses are usually wrong. Even we cannot guess right about such
4496 things without first using the debugger to find the facts.
4497 @end itemize
4498
4499 @node MRI
4500 @appendix MRI Compatible Script Files
4501 @cindex MRI compatibility
4502 To aid users making the transition to @sc{gnu} @code{ld} from the MRI
4503 linker, @code{ld} can use MRI compatible linker scripts as an
4504 alternative to the more general-purpose linker scripting language
4505 described in @ref{Scripts}. MRI compatible linker scripts have a much
4506 simpler command set than the scripting language otherwise used with
4507 @code{ld}. @sc{gnu} @code{ld} supports the most commonly used MRI
4508 linker commands; these commands are described here.
4509
4510 In general, MRI scripts aren't of much use with the @code{a.out} object
4511 file format, since it only has three sections and MRI scripts lack some
4512 features to make use of them.
4513
4514 You can specify a file containing an MRI-compatible script using the
4515 @samp{-c} command-line option.
4516
4517 Each command in an MRI-compatible script occupies its own line; each
4518 command line starts with the keyword that identifies the command (though
4519 blank lines are also allowed for punctuation). If a line of an
4520 MRI-compatible script begins with an unrecognized keyword, @code{ld}
4521 issues a warning message, but continues processing the script.
4522
4523 Lines beginning with @samp{*} are comments.
4524
4525 You can write these commands using all upper-case letters, or all
4526 lower case; for example, @samp{chip} is the same as @samp{CHIP}.
4527 The following list shows only the upper-case form of each command.
4528
4529 @table @code
4530 @cindex @code{ABSOLUTE} (MRI)
4531 @item ABSOLUTE @var{secname}
4532 @itemx ABSOLUTE @var{secname}, @var{secname}, @dots{} @var{secname}
4533 Normally, @code{ld} includes in the output file all sections from all
4534 the input files. However, in an MRI-compatible script, you can use the
4535 @code{ABSOLUTE} command to restrict the sections that will be present in
4536 your output program. If the @code{ABSOLUTE} command is used at all in a
4537 script, then only the sections named explicitly in @code{ABSOLUTE}
4538 commands will appear in the linker output. You can still use other
4539 input sections (whatever you select on the command line, or using
4540 @code{LOAD}) to resolve addresses in the output file.
4541
4542 @cindex @code{ALIAS} (MRI)
4543 @item ALIAS @var{out-secname}, @var{in-secname}
4544 Use this command to place the data from input section @var{in-secname}
4545 in a section called @var{out-secname} in the linker output file.
4546
4547 @var{in-secname} may be an integer.
4548
4549 @cindex @code{ALIGN} (MRI)
4550 @item ALIGN @var{secname} = @var{expression}
4551 Align the section called @var{secname} to @var{expression}. The
4552 @var{expression} should be a power of two.
4553
4554 @cindex @code{BASE} (MRI)
4555 @item BASE @var{expression}
4556 Use the value of @var{expression} as the lowest address (other than
4557 absolute addresses) in the output file.
4558
4559 @cindex @code{CHIP} (MRI)
4560 @item CHIP @var{expression}
4561 @itemx CHIP @var{expression}, @var{expression}
4562 This command does nothing; it is accepted only for compatibility.
4563
4564 @cindex @code{END} (MRI)
4565 @item END
4566 This command does nothing whatever; it's only accepted for compatibility.
4567
4568 @cindex @code{FORMAT} (MRI)
4569 @item FORMAT @var{output-format}
4570 Similar to the @code{OUTPUT_FORMAT} command in the more general linker
4571 language, but restricted to one of these output formats:
4572
4573 @enumerate
4574 @item
4575 S-records, if @var{output-format} is @samp{S}
4576
4577 @item
4578 IEEE, if @var{output-format} is @samp{IEEE}
4579
4580 @item
4581 COFF (the @samp{coff-m68k} variant in BFD), if @var{output-format} is
4582 @samp{COFF}
4583 @end enumerate
4584
4585 @cindex @code{LIST} (MRI)
4586 @item LIST @var{anything}@dots{}
4587 Print (to the standard output file) a link map, as produced by the
4588 @code{ld} command-line option @samp{-M}.
4589
4590 The keyword @code{LIST} may be followed by anything on the
4591 same line, with no change in its effect.
4592
4593 @cindex @code{LOAD} (MRI)
4594 @item LOAD @var{filename}
4595 @itemx LOAD @var{filename}, @var{filename}, @dots{} @var{filename}
4596 Include one or more object file @var{filename} in the link; this has the
4597 same effect as specifying @var{filename} directly on the @code{ld}
4598 command line.
4599
4600 @cindex @code{NAME} (MRI)
4601 @item NAME @var{output-name}
4602 @var{output-name} is the name for the program produced by @code{ld}; the
4603 MRI-compatible command @code{NAME} is equivalent to the command-line
4604 option @samp{-o} or the general script language command @code{OUTPUT}.
4605
4606 @cindex @code{ORDER} (MRI)
4607 @item ORDER @var{secname}, @var{secname}, @dots{} @var{secname}
4608 @itemx ORDER @var{secname} @var{secname} @var{secname}
4609 Normally, @code{ld} orders the sections in its output file in the
4610 order in which they first appear in the input files. In an MRI-compatible
4611 script, you can override this ordering with the @code{ORDER} command. The
4612 sections you list with @code{ORDER} will appear first in your output
4613 file, in the order specified.
4614
4615 @cindex @code{PUBLIC} (MRI)
4616 @item PUBLIC @var{name}=@var{expression}
4617 @itemx PUBLIC @var{name},@var{expression}
4618 @itemx PUBLIC @var{name} @var{expression}
4619 Supply a value (@var{expression}) for external symbol
4620 @var{name} used in the linker input files.
4621
4622 @cindex @code{SECT} (MRI)
4623 @item SECT @var{secname}, @var{expression}
4624 @itemx SECT @var{secname}=@var{expression}
4625 @itemx SECT @var{secname} @var{expression}
4626 You can use any of these three forms of the @code{SECT} command to
4627 specify the start address (@var{expression}) for section @var{secname}.
4628 If you have more than one @code{SECT} statement for the same
4629 @var{secname}, only the @emph{first} sets the start address.
4630 @end table
4631
4632 @node GNU Free Documentation License
4633 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
4634 @cindex GNU Free Documentation License
4635
4636 GNU Free Documentation License
4637
4638 Version 1.1, March 2000
4639
4640 Copyright (C) 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4641 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
4642
4643 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
4644 of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
4645
4646
4647 0. PREAMBLE
4648
4649 The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
4650 written document "free" in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone
4651 the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without
4652 modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily,
4653 this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get
4654 credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for
4655 modifications made by others.
4656
4657 This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative
4658 works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It
4659 complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
4660 license designed for free software.
4661
4662 We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free
4663 software, because free software needs free documentation: a free
4664 program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the
4665 software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals;
4666 it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or
4667 whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License
4668 principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.
4669
4670
4671 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
4672
4673 This License applies to any manual or other work that contains a
4674 notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed
4675 under the terms of this License. The "Document", below, refers to any
4676 such manual or work. Any member of the public is a licensee, and is
4677 addressed as "you".
4678
4679 A "Modified Version" of the Document means any work containing the
4680 Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
4681 modifications and/or translated into another language.
4682
4683 A "Secondary Section" is a named appendix or a front-matter section of
4684 the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
4685 publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall subject
4686 (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could fall directly
4687 within that overall subject. (For example, if the Document is in part a
4688 textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not explain any
4689 mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of historical
4690 connection with the subject or with related matters, or of legal,
4691 commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position regarding
4692 them.
4693
4694 The "Invariant Sections" are certain Secondary Sections whose titles
4695 are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the notice
4696 that says that the Document is released under this License.
4697
4698 The "Cover Texts" are certain short passages of text that are listed,
4699 as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice that says that
4700 the Document is released under this License.
4701
4702 A "Transparent" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
4703 represented in a format whose specification is available to the
4704 general public, whose contents can be viewed and edited directly and
4705 straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed of
4706 pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely available
4707 drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text formatters or
4708 for automatic translation to a variety of formats suitable for input
4709 to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise Transparent file
4710 format whose markup has been designed to thwart or discourage
4711 subsequent modification by readers is not Transparent. A copy that is
4712 not "Transparent" is called "Opaque".
4713
4714 Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
4715 ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, SGML
4716 or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming simple
4717 HTML designed for human modification. Opaque formats include
4718 PostScript, PDF, proprietary formats that can be read and edited only
4719 by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which the DTD and/or
4720 processing tools are not generally available, and the
4721 machine-generated HTML produced by some word processors for output
4722 purposes only.
4723
4724 The "Title Page" means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
4725 plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the material
4726 this License requires to appear in the title page. For works in
4727 formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title Page" means
4728 the text near the most prominent appearance of the work's title,
4729 preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
4730
4731
4732 2. VERBATIM COPYING
4733
4734 You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
4735 commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
4736 copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License applies
4737 to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you add no other
4738 conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may not use
4739 technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or further
4740 copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you may accept
4741 compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a large enough
4742 number of copies you must also follow the conditions in section 3.
4743
4744 You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, and
4745 you may publicly display copies.
4746
4747
4748 3. COPYING IN QUANTITY
4749
4750 If you publish printed copies of the Document numbering more than 100,
4751 and the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must enclose
4752 the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all these Cover
4753 Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and Back-Cover Texts on
4754 the back cover. Both covers must also clearly and legibly identify
4755 you as the publisher of these copies. The front cover must present
4756 the full title with all words of the title equally prominent and
4757 visible. You may add other material on the covers in addition.
4758 Copying with changes limited to the covers, as long as they preserve
4759 the title of the Document and satisfy these conditions, can be treated
4760 as verbatim copying in other respects.
4761
4762 If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
4763 legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
4764 reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto adjacent
4765 pages.
4766
4767 If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document numbering
4768 more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable Transparent
4769 copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with each Opaque copy
4770 a publicly-accessible computer-network location containing a complete
4771 Transparent copy of the Document, free of added material, which the
4772 general network-using public has access to download anonymously at no
4773 charge using public-standard network protocols. If you use the latter
4774 option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you begin
4775 distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that this
4776 Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated location
4777 until at least one year after the last time you distribute an Opaque
4778 copy (directly or through your agents or retailers) of that edition to
4779 the public.
4780
4781 It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of the
4782 Document well before redistributing any large number of copies, to give
4783 them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the Document.
4784
4785
4786 4. MODIFICATIONS
4787
4788 You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under
4789 the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release
4790 the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified
4791 Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution
4792 and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy
4793 of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version:
4794
4795 A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct
4796 from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions
4797 (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section
4798 of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version
4799 if the original publisher of that version gives permission.
4800 B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities
4801 responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified
4802 Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the
4803 Document (all of its principal authors, if it has less than five).
4804 C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
4805 Modified Version, as the publisher.
4806 D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
4807 E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
4808 adjacent to the other copyright notices.
4809 F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice
4810 giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the
4811 terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below.
4812 G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections
4813 and required Cover Texts given in the Document's license notice.
4814 H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
4815 I. Preserve the section entitled "History", and its title, and add to
4816 it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and
4817 publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If
4818 there is no section entitled "History" in the Document, create one
4819 stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as
4820 given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified
4821 Version as stated in the previous sentence.
4822 J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for
4823 public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise
4824 the network locations given in the Document for previous versions
4825 it was based on. These may be placed in the "History" section.
4826 You may omit a network location for a work that was published at
4827 least four years before the Document itself, or if the original
4828 publisher of the version it refers to gives permission.
4829 K. In any section entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications",
4830 preserve the section's title, and preserve in the section all the
4831 substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements
4832 and/or dedications given therein.
4833 L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document,
4834 unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers
4835 or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
4836 M. Delete any section entitled "Endorsements". Such a section
4837 may not be included in the Modified Version.
4838 N. Do not retitle any existing section as "Endorsements"
4839 or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section.
4840
4841 If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
4842 appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no material
4843 copied from the Document, you may at your option designate some or all
4844 of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their titles to the
4845 list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's license notice.
4846 These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.
4847
4848 You may add a section entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
4849 nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
4850 parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text has
4851 been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of a
4852 standard.
4853
4854 You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a
4855 passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of the list
4856 of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage of
4857 Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
4858 through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document already
4859 includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added by you or
4860 by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on behalf of,
4861 you may not add another; but you may replace the old one, on explicit
4862 permission from the previous publisher that added the old one.
4863
4864 The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this License
4865 give permission to use their names for publicity for or to assert or
4866 imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
4867
4868
4869 5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS
4870
4871 You may combine the Document with other documents released under this
4872 License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for modified
4873 versions, provided that you include in the combination all of the
4874 Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, unmodified, and
4875 list them all as Invariant Sections of your combined work in its
4876 license notice.
4877
4878 The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
4879 multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
4880 copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name but
4881 different contents, make the title of each such section unique by
4882 adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the original
4883 author or publisher of that section if known, or else a unique number.
4884 Make the same adjustment to the section titles in the list of
4885 Invariant Sections in the license notice of the combined work.
4886
4887 In the combination, you must combine any sections entitled "History"
4888 in the various original documents, forming one section entitled
4889 "History"; likewise combine any sections entitled "Acknowledgements",
4890 and any sections entitled "Dedications". You must delete all sections
4891 entitled "Endorsements."
4892
4893
4894 6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
4895
4896 You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other documents
4897 released under this License, and replace the individual copies of this
4898 License in the various documents with a single copy that is included in
4899 the collection, provided that you follow the rules of this License for
4900 verbatim copying of each of the documents in all other respects.
4901
4902 You may extract a single document from such a collection, and distribute
4903 it individually under this License, provided you insert a copy of this
4904 License into the extracted document, and follow this License in all
4905 other respects regarding verbatim copying of that document.
4906
4907
4908 7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
4909
4910 A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other separate
4911 and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a storage or
4912 distribution medium, does not as a whole count as a Modified Version
4913 of the Document, provided no compilation copyright is claimed for the
4914 compilation. Such a compilation is called an "aggregate", and this
4915 License does not apply to the other self-contained works thus compiled
4916 with the Document, on account of their being thus compiled, if they
4917 are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
4918
4919 If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
4920 copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one quarter
4921 of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed on
4922 covers that surround only the Document within the aggregate.
4923 Otherwise they must appear on covers around the whole aggregate.
4924
4925
4926 8. TRANSLATION
4927
4928 Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
4929 distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4.
4930 Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
4931 permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
4932 translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
4933 original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
4934 translation of this License provided that you also include the
4935 original English version of this License. In case of a disagreement
4936 between the translation and the original English version of this
4937 License, the original English version will prevail.
4938
4939
4940 9. TERMINATION
4941
4942 You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document except
4943 as expressly provided for under this License. Any other attempt to
4944 copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Document is void, and will
4945 automatically terminate your rights under this License. However,
4946 parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this
4947 License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
4948 parties remain in full compliance.
4949
4950
4951 10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
4952
4953 The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions
4954 of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
4955 versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
4956 differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
4957 http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/.
4958
4959 Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number.
4960 If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this
4961 License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the option of
4962 following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or
4963 of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the
4964 Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version
4965 number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not
4966 as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation.
4967
4968
4969 ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
4970
4971 To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
4972 the License in the document and put the following copyright and
4973 license notices just after the title page:
4974
4975 @smallexample
4976 Copyright (c) YEAR YOUR NAME.
4977 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
4978 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
4979 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
4980 with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the
4981 Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST.
4982 A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
4983 Free Documentation License".
4984 @end smallexample
4985
4986 If you have no Invariant Sections, write "with no Invariant Sections"
4987 instead of saying which ones are invariant. If you have no
4988 Front-Cover Texts, write "no Front-Cover Texts" instead of
4989 "Front-Cover Texts being LIST"; likewise for Back-Cover Texts.
4990
4991 If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
4992 recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of
4993 free software license, such as the GNU General Public License,
4994 to permit their use in free software.
4995
4996 @node Index
4997 @unnumbered Index
4998
4999 @printindex cp
5000
5001 @tex
5002 % I think something like @colophon should be in texinfo. In the
5003 % meantime:
5004 \long\def\colophon{\hbox to0pt{}\vfill
5005 \centerline{The body of this manual is set in}
5006 \centerline{\fontname\tenrm,}
5007 \centerline{with headings in {\bf\fontname\tenbf}}
5008 \centerline{and examples in {\tt\fontname\tentt}.}
5009 \centerline{{\it\fontname\tenit\/} and}
5010 \centerline{{\sl\fontname\tensl\/}}
5011 \centerline{are used for emphasis.}\vfill}
5012 \page\colophon
5013 % Blame: doc@cygnus.com, 28mar91.
5014 @end tex
5015
5016
5017 @contents
5018 @bye
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