As we don't sort local symbols, don't sort non-local symbols. This makes non-local symbols appear in their register order, which matches GNU as. The register order is nice in that you can write tests with interleaved CHECK prefixes, e.g. ``` // CHECK: something about foo .globl foo foo: // CHECK: something about bar .globl bar bar: ``` With the lexicographical order, the user needs to place lexicographical smallest symbol first or keep CHECK prefixes in one place.
29 lines
700 B
ArmAsm
29 lines
700 B
ArmAsm
# REQUIRES: x86
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# RUN: echo "VER1 { global: _end; foo ; local: * ; } ;" > %t.script
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# RUN: llvm-mc -filetype=obj -triple=x86_64-pc-linux %s -o %t.o
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# RUN: ld.lld --version-script %t.script -shared %t.o -o %t.so
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# RUN: llvm-readobj --dyn-syms %t.so | FileCheck %s
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# CHECK: Name: foo@@VER1
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# CHECK-NEXT: Value: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Size: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Binding: Global
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# CHECK-NEXT: Type: None
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# CHECK-NEXT: Other: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Section: .text
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# CHECK: Name: _end@@VER1
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# CHECK-NEXT: Value: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Size: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Binding: Global
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# CHECK-NEXT: Type: None
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# CHECK-NEXT: Other: 0
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# CHECK-NEXT: Section: .data
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.global foo
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foo:
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.data
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.quad _end
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.quad foo
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