On 16.04.2025 11:00, Jan Beulich wrote: > By observation GNU ld 2.25 may emit file symbols for .data.read_mostly > when linking xen.efi. Due to the nature of file symbols in COFF symbol > tables (see the code comment) the symbols_offsets[] entries for such > symbols would cause assembler warnings regarding value truncation. Of > course the resulting entries would also be both meaningless and useless. > Add a heuristic to get rid of them, really taking effect only when > --all-symbols is specified (otherwise these symbols are discarded > anyway). > > Signed-off-by: Jan Beulich <[email protected]>
May I please ask for feedback here, so that hopefully we can have this sorted in 4.21? Jan > --- > Factor 2 may in principle still be too small: We zap what looks like > real file symbols already in read_symbol(), so table_cnt doesn't really > reflect the number of symbol table entries encountered. It has proven to > work for me in practice though, with still some leeway left. > > --- a/xen/tools/symbols.c > +++ b/xen/tools/symbols.c > @@ -213,6 +213,16 @@ static int symbol_valid(struct sym_entry > if (strstr((char *)s->sym + offset, "_compiled.")) > return 0; > > + /* At least GNU ld 2.25 may emit bogus file symbols referencing a > + * section name while linking xen.efi. In COFF symbol tables the > + * "value" of file symbols is a link (symbol table index) to the next > + * file symbol. Since file (and other) symbols (can) come with one > + * (or in principle more) auxiliary symbol table entries, the value in > + * this heuristic is bounded to twice the number of symbols we have > + * found. See also read_symbol() as to the '?' checked for here. */ > + if (s->sym[0] == '?' && s->sym[1] == '.' && s->addr < table_cnt * 2) > + return 0; > + > return 1; > } >
