; REQUIRES: x86 ;; The LLVM bitcode format allows for an optional wrapper header. This test ;; shows that LLD can handle bitcode wrapped in this way, and also that an ;; invalid offset in the wrapper header is handled cleanly. ; RUN: rm -rf %t ; RUN: split-file %s %t ; RUN: llvm-as %t/ir.ll -o %t.bc ;; Basic case: ; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t.o 0 0x14 ; RUN: ld.lld %t.o -o %t.elf ; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t.elf | FileCheck %s ;; Padding between wrapper header and body: ; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t.o 0x10 0x24 ; RUN: ld.lld %t.o -o %t.elf ; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t.elf | FileCheck %s ; CHECK: _start ;; Invalid offset past end of file: ; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t2.o 0x10 0xffffffff ; RUN: not ld.lld %t2.o -o %t2.elf 2>&1 | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=ERR1 -DFILE=%t2.o ; ERR1: error: [[FILE]]: Invalid bitcode wrapper header ;; Invalid offset within file: ; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t3.o 0x10 0x14 ; RUN: not ld.lld %t3.o -o %t3.elf 2>&1 | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=ERR2 -DFILE=%t3.o ; ERR2: error: [[FILE]]: file doesn't start with bitcode header ;--- ir.ll target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128" target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" @_start = global i32 0 ;--- wrap_bitcode.py ## Arguments are: input file, output file, padding size, offset value. import struct import sys with open(sys.argv[1], 'rb') as input: bitcode = input.read() padding = int(sys.argv[3], 16) * b'\0' offset = int(sys.argv[4], 16) header = struct.pack('