[cfe-dev] [llvm-dev] What is an address-significant symbol?

Peter Smith via cfe-dev cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org
Fri Nov 22 03:34:21 PST 2019


On Fri, 22 Nov 2019 at 11:20, Gaier, Bjoern via llvm-dev
<llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
>
> Hello LLVM- and Clang-List,
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>
>
> I’m not sure if this a subject for LLVM or Clang – but there is something I don’t understand. I wrote the following code in C++:
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> searchPlanschi(&__stdio_common_vswprintf);
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> ‚searchPlanschi‘ is a function I provide. Clang generates the following assembly code for this:
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>      lea   rcx, [rip + __stdio_common_vswprintf]
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>       call  "?searchPlanschi@@YAXPEAX at Z"
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>
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> I was surprised to see the register rip there, as far as I know this is the Instruction register, right? Why do I need the rip register to get the address of the function? I searched the assembly file for ‘__stdio_common_vswprintf’ to get some hints about this. The only thing I found was:
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>       .addrsig
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>       .addrsig_sym __stdio_common_vswprintf
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> So I googled “.addrsig” and found the following text:
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> “This section is used to mark symbols as address-significant, i.e. the address of the symbol is used in a comparison or leaks outside the translation unit. It has the same meaning as the absence of the LLVM attributes unnamed_addr and local_unnamed_addr.
> Any sections referred to by symbols that are not marked as address-significant in any object file may be safely merged by a linker without breaking the address uniqueness guarantee provided by the C and C++ language standards.
> The contents of the section are a sequence of ULEB128-encoded integers referring to the symbol table indexes of the address-significant symbols.”
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> But sadly… this is way over my head. What does that actually mean? Does that explain the code construct with the rip register? Is that a form of optimization?
>

There is a linker optimization called identical code folding (ICF).
The details of the initial implementation in gold is described in
https://ai.google/research/pubs/pub36912 . ICF can cause problems when
the program depends on functions having a unique address, both gold
and LLD have an --icf=safe mode that limits the scope of the
optimization to avoid folding sections that are "address-significant".
The implementation in gold uses linker heuristics such as relocation
type to determine address significance. The implementation in LLD uses
information generated by the compiler, which is placed in .addrsig.

I can't answer the question about code-generation off the top of my
head, my understanding is that .addrsig is primarily used for
implementing --icf=safe in linkers, I don't think it has an affect on
code-generation.

Hope this is of some help

Peter

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> Thank you in advance for any help!
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>
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> Kind greetings
>
> Björn
>
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