On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 11:19:13AM -0700, Chris Lattner wrote:
> 
> On Mar 13, 2011, at 8:38 AM, Jack Howarth wrote:
> 
> > On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 12:39:26PM +0100, Jan Hubicka wrote:
> >>>   With release of Xcode 3.2.6/4.0 this week, an unfortunate change was 
> >>> made to
> >>> the darwin assembler which effectively breaks LTO support for darwin. The 
> >>> design
> >>> of LTO on darwin was based on the fact that mach-o object files tolerated 
> >>> additional
> >>> sections as long as they didin't contain symbols. With Xcode 3.2.6/4.0, 
> >>> the assembler
> >>> appears to be strictly counting sections and objecting when these exceed 
> >>> 255. This
> >>> breaks huge sections of the lto testsuite and prevents larger projects 
> >>> like xplor-nih
> >>> to compile if Xcode 3.2.6/4.0 is installed. I am afraid that unless Apple 
> >>> reverts this
> >>> change, our only recourse would be to resort to an elf object container 
> >>> for the lto
> >>> sections within the mach-o files (introducing an undesired dependency on 
> >>> libelf for
> >>> FSF gcc on darwin). My understanding was that the lto design did not 
> >>> allow the number
> >>> of sections required in the lto files to be reduced.
> >> 
> >> If the problem is not fixed, we could always pack all the LTO sections 
> >> into one section containing
> >> our own subsections.
> >> 
> >> Honza
> > 
> > Jan,
> >  If this could be done without resorting to other container types (like 
> > elf), it might be
> > the wisest approach for the long run. I've read through the mach-o 
> > documentation and it
> > seems rather vague on the section limits. Even if Apple fixes Xcode (which 
> > likley won't
> > happen for 6-9 months at best), we always we have to worry that they will 
> > break this 
> > 'feature' somewhere else in their tool chain. Better to follow the 
> > strictest possible reading
> > of mach-o object format to protect ourselves from overzealous Apple interns.
> 
> Yes, I agree that this is a better solution.  This error was put into the 
> linker to detect some overflow conditions for part of the code that expected 
> the section number to only be a byte.  It is likely that "things worked" only 
> out of luck before.
> 
> -Chris

Chris,
   Is there any documentation or example code on how to properly use 
subsections in mach-o?
My fear is that we are moving from one poorly documented technique to another 
which may well
have it own slate of hidden bugs.
          Jack

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