This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
The exports trie used to be pointed by the information in LC_DYLD_INFO,
but when chained fixups are present, the exports trie is pointed by
LC_DYLD_EXPORTS_TRIE instead.
Modify ObjCopy code to calculate the right offset and size needed
depending on the existence of LC_DYLD_INFO or LC_DYLD_EXPORTS_TRIE, read
the exports from either of those places, and write the export
information as pointed to either of those places.
Depends on D134571.
Reviewed By: alexander-shaposhnikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137879
The exports trie and the chained fixups where in the opposite order, and
function starts happenned before them, instead of after them.
Restore the correct order and rewrite the code to make it easier to move
around in the future if needed by reusing the `Offset` variable and
keeping both the `StartOf...` and the size of each piece together.
This was found out while trying to use the system strip in a binary
already stripped by LLVM and receiving errors around chained fixups when
we enabled those in the linker.
Reviewed By: alexander-shaposhnikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133974
Cleanup: avoid referring to `std::vector<T>` members when `T` is incomplete.
This is [not legal](https://timsong-cpp.github.io/cppwp/n4868/vector#overview-4)
according to the C++ standard, and causes build errors in particular in C++20
mode. Fix it by defining the vector's type before using the vector.
Reviewed By: saugustine, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135906
The result of pointer subtraction is of type ptrdiff_t, which is not necessarily the same underlying type as ssize_t. This can lead to a compilation error since std::min requires both parameters to be the same type.
Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54846
Reviewed By: alexander-shaposhnikov, drodriguez, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128117
This reverts commit 3988bd13988aad72ec979beb2361e8738584926b.
Did not build on this bot:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot#builders/215/builds/6372
/usr/include/c++/9/bits/predefined_ops.h:177:11: error: no match for call to
‘(llvm::less_first) (std::pair<long unsigned int, llvm::bolt::BinaryBasicBlock*>&, const std::pair<long unsigned int, std::nullptr_t>&)’
177 | { return bool(_M_comp(*__it, __val)); }
One could reuse this functor instead of rolling out your own version.
There were a couple other cases where the code was similar, but not
quite the same, such as it might have an assertion in the lambda or other
constructs. Thus, I've not touched any of those, as it might change the
behavior in some way.
As per https://discourse.llvm.org/t/submitting-simple-nfc-patches/62640/3?u=steakhal
Chris Lattner
> LLVM intentionally has a “yes, you can apply common sense judgement to
> things” policy when it comes to code review. If you are doing mechanical
> patches (e.g. adopting less_first) that apply to the entire monorepo,
> then you don’t need everyone in the monorepo to sign off on it. Having
> some +1 validation from someone is useful, but you don’t need everyone
> whose code you touch to weigh in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126068
When creating an archive, llvm-ar looks at the host to determine the
archive format to use, on Apple platforms this means it uses the
K_DARWIN format. K_DARWIN is _virtually_ equivalent to K_BSD, expect for
some very slight differences around padding, timestamps in deterministic
mode, and 64 bit formats. When updating an archive using llvm-ar, or
llvm-objcopy, Archive would try to determine the kind, but it was not
possible to get K_DARWIN in the initialization of the archive, because
they're virtually inciting usable from K_BSD, especially since the
slight differences only apply in very specific cases. This leads to
linker failures when the alignment workaround is not applied to an
archive copied with llvm-objcopy. This change teaches Archive to infer
the K_DARWIN type in the cases where it's possible and the first object
in the archive is a macho object. This avoids using the host triple to
determine this to not affect cross compiling.
Ideally we would eliminate the separate K_DARWIN type entirely since
it's not a truly separate archive type, but then we'd have to force the
macho workarounds on the BSD format generally. This might be acceptable
but then it would be unclear how to handle this case without forcing the
K_DARWIN64 format on all BSD users:
```
if (LastOffset >= Sym64Threshold) {
if (Kind == object::Archive::K_DARWIN)
Kind = object::Archive::K_DARWIN64;
else
Kind = object::Archive::K_GNU64;
}
```
The logic used to determine if the object is macho is derived from the
logic llvm-ar uses.
Previous context:
- 111cd669e90e5b2132187d36f8b141b11a671a8b
- 23a76be5adcaa768ba538f8a4514a7afccf61988
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124895
Returning `std::array<uint8_t, N>` is better ergonomics for the hashing functions usage, instead of a `StringRef`:
* When returning `StringRef`, client code is "jumping through hoops" to do string manipulations instead of dealing with fixed array of bytes directly, which is more natural
* Returning `std::array<uint8_t, N>` avoids the need for the hasher classes to keep a field just for the purpose of wrapping it and returning it as a `StringRef`
As part of this patch also:
* Introduce `TruncatedBLAKE3` which is useful for using BLAKE3 as the hasher type for `HashBuilder` with non-default hash sizes.
* Make `MD5Result` inherit from `std::array<uint8_t, 16>` which improves & simplifies its API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123100
When running llvm-bitcode-strip we want to remove the __LLVM
segment as well as the __bundle section when there are no other
sections in the segment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120927
Current objcopy implementation has a possibility to add or update sections.
The incoming section is specified as a pair: section name and name of the file
containing section data. The interface does not allow to specify incoming
section as a memory buffer. This patch adds possibility to specify incoming
section as a memory buffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120486
libtool uses file names to name members of an static library.
Files, located in different directories and having matching name,
would have the same name inside an archive. This is not a problem
for ld, but may be a problem for ar. This patch renames files
from ObjCopy library to avoid names clashing.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D88827#3335814
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120345