2

Using commands like BYTE or LONG, it is possible to include explicit bytes of data in an output section from a linker script. The linked page also describes that those commands can be used to output the value of symbols.

I would have expected that if you perform partial linking (i.e., using the -r option of ld), relocation records would be emitted for the symbols that are outputted in this way. However, it seems that the linker just outputs the currently known value1 of the symbol.

Here is a MWE to clarify what I mean.

test.c:

int foo = 1, bar = 2;

test.ld:

SECTIONS {
    .data : {
        *(.data)
        LONG(foo)
        LONG(bar)
    }
}

Then run the following:

$ gcc -c test.c
$ ld -T test.ld -r -o test.elf test.o
$ readelf -r test.elf                

There are no relocations in this file.
$ readelf -x .data test.elf

Hex dump of section '.data':
  0x00000000 01000000 02000000 00000000 04000000 ................

As you can see, no relocations are created and the values that are outputted are the currently known values of foo and bar.

Could this be a bug? If not, is there any way to force the linker to output relocation records for symbols added to an output section?


1 I'm not sure of this is the correct term. What I mean is the value that you see when you run readelf -s on the input object file.

2
  • Possibly because they are not referenced from anywhere. If you were to create the function fubar like int fubar() { return foo+bar;} I would expect that some from of relocation records would be produced. As I see it you wouldn't get relocation records with no references. ` Dec 3, 2015 at 15:02
  • @MichaelPetch: Well, they are referenced from the linker script but for some reason ld treats those references differently than the "normal" kind of references you mention.
    – mtvec
    Dec 3, 2015 at 15:10

0

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