On rela architectures GNU BFD ld and gold store the relocation addend
in GOT entries (in addition to the relocation's r_addend field).
rtld previously relied on this to access its own _DYNAMIC symbol in
order to apply its own relocations.
However, recording addends in the GOT is not specified by the ABI,
and some versions of LLVM's LLD linker leave the GOT uninitialized on
rela architectures.
BFD ld does not populate the GOT on sparc64, and sparc64 rtld has a
machine-dependent rtld_dynamic_addr() function that returns the
_DYNAMIC address. Use the same approach on amd64, obtaining the %rip-
relative _DYNAMIC address following a suggestion from Rafael Espíndola.
Architectures other than amd64 should be addressed in future work.
PR: 214972
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D9180
rtld on x86 to be hidden. This is a micro-optimization, which allows
intrinsic references inside rtld to be handled without indirection
through PLT. The visibility of rtld symbols for other objects in the
symbol namespace is controlled by a version script.
Reviewed by: kan, jilles
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
with the correct alignment. This is important because this calls to
library static constructors are made from here. The bug in the old crt*.s
files hid this because in this case, two wrongs do indeed make a right.
Also, call _rtld_bind() with the correct alignment, because it calls back
into the pthread library locking functions. If things happen just
the wrong way, we get a SIG10 due to the broken stack alignment.
quite a few enhancements and bug fixes. There are still some known
deficiencies, but it should be adequate to get us started with ELF.
Submitted by: John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>