ld
Section: GNU Development Tools (1)
Updated: 17 August 1992
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NAME
ld - the GNU linker
SYNOPSIS
- ld
-
[-o
output] objfiles...
[-Aarchitecture]
[-b input-format]
[-Bstatic]
[-c commandfile]
[-d|-dc|-dp]
[-defsym symbol = expression]
[-e entry]
[-F]
[-F format]
[-format input-format]
[-g]
[-i]
[-lar]
[-Lsearchdir]
[-M|-m]
[-n|-N]
[-noinhibit-exec]
[-R filename]
[-relax]
[-r|-Ur]
[-S]
[-s]
[-T commandfile]
[-Ttext textorg]
[-Tdata dataorg]
[-Tbss bssorg]
[-t]
[-u sym]
[-v]
[-X]
[-x]
[{script}]
DESCRIPTION
ld combines a number of object and archive files, relocates
their data and ties up symbol references. Often the last step in
building a new compiled program to run is a call to ld.
ld accepts Linker Command Language files
to provide explicit and total control over the linking process.
This man page does not describe the command language; see the `ld' entry in `info', or the manual
ld: the GNU linker
, for full details on the command language and on other aspects of
the GNU linker.
This version of ld uses the general purpose BFD libraries
to operate on object files. This allows ld to read, combine, and
write object files in many different formats---for example, COFF or
a.out. Different formats may be linked together to produce any
available kind of object file. You can use `objdump -i' to get a list of formats supported on various architectures; see
objdump(1).
Aside from its flexibility, the GNU linker is more helpful than other
linkers in providing diagnostic information. Many linkers abandon
execution immediately upon encountering an error; whenever possible,
ld continues executing, allowing you to identify other errors
(or, in some cases, to get an output file in spite of the error).
The GNU linker ld is meant to cover a broad range of situations,
and to be as compatible as possible with other linkers. As a result,
you have many choices to control its behavior through the command line,
and through environment variables.
OPTIONS
The plethora of command-line options may seem intimidating, but in
actual practice few of them are used in any particular context.
For instance, a frequent use of ld is to link standard Unix
object files on a standard, supported Unix system. On such a system, to
link a file hello.o:
$ ld -o output /lib/crt0.o hello.o -lc
This tells ld to produce a file called output as the
result of linking the file /lib/crt0.o with hello.o and
the library libc.a which will come from the standard search
directories.
The command-line options to ld may be specified in any order, and
may be repeated at will. For the most part, repeating an option with a
different argument will either have no further effect, or override prior
occurrences (those further to the left on the command line) of an
option.
The exceptions---which may meaningfully be used more than once---are
-A, -b (or its synonym -format), -defsym,
-L, -l, -R, and -u.
The list of object files to be linked together, shown as objfiles,
may follow, precede, or be mixed in with command-line options; save that
an objfiles argument may not be placed between an option flag and
its argument.
Usually the linker is invoked with at least one object file, but other
forms of binary input files can also be specified with -l,
-R, and the script command language. If no binary input
files at all are specified, the linker does not produce any output, and
issues the message `No input files'.
Option arguments must either follow the option letter without intervening
whitespace, or be given as separate arguments immediately following the
option that requires them.
- objfiles...
-
The object files objfiles to be linked.
- -Aarchitecture
-
In the current release of ld, this option is useful only for the
Intel 960 family of architectures. In that ld configuration, the
architecture argument is one of the two-letter names identifying
members of the 960 family; the option specifies the desired output
target, and warns of any incompatible instructions in the input files.
It also modifies the linker's search strategy for archive libraries, to
support the use of libraries specific to each particular
architecture, by including in the search loop names suffixed with the
string identifying the architecture.
For example, if your ld command line included `-ACA' as
well as `-ltry', the linker would look (in its built-in search
paths, and in any paths you specify with -L) for a library with
the names
try
libtry.a
tryca
libtryca.a
The first two possibilities would be considered in any event; the last
two are due to the use of `-ACA'.
Future releases of ld may support similar functionality for
other architecture families.
You can meaningfully use -A more than once on a command line, if
an architecture family allows combination of target architectures; each
use will add another pair of name variants to search for when -l
specifies a library.
- -b input-format
-
Specify the binary format for input object files that follow this option
on the command line. You don't usually need to specify this, as
ld is configured to expect as a default input format the most
usual format on each machine. input-format is a text string, the
name of a particular format supported by the BFD libraries.
-format input-format has the same effect.
You may want to use this option if you are linking files with an unusual
binary format. You can also use -b to switch formats explicitly (when
linking object files of different formats), by including
-b input-format before each group of object files in a
particular format.
The default format is taken from the environment variable
GNUTARGET. You can also define the input
format from a script, using the command TARGET.
- -Bstatic
-
This flag is accepted for command-line compatibility with the SunOS linker,
but has no effect on ld.
- -c commandfile
-
Directs ld to read link commands from the file
commandfile. These commands will completely override ld's
default link format (rather than adding to it); commandfile must
specify everything necessary to describe the target format.
You may also include a script of link commands directly in the command
line by bracketing it between `{' and `}' characters.
- -d
-
- -dc
-
- -dp
-
These three options are equivalent; multiple forms are supported for
compatibility with other linkers. Use any of them to make ld
assign space to common symbols even if a relocatable output file is
specified (-r). The script command
FORCE_COMMON_ALLOCATION has the same effect.
- -defsym symbol
-
= expression
Create a global symbol in the output file, containing the absolute
address given by expression. You may use this option as many
times as necessary to define multiple symbols in the command line. A
limited form of arithmetic is supported for the expression in this
context: you may give a hexadecimal constant or the name of an existing
symbol, or use + and - to add or subtract hexadecimal
constants or symbols. If you need more elaborate expressions, consider
using the linker command language from a script.
- -e entry
-
Use entry as the explicit symbol for beginning execution of your
program, rather than the default entry point. for a
discussion of defaults and other ways of specifying the
entry point.
- -F
-
- -Fformat
-
Some older linkers used this option throughout a compilation toolchain
for specifying object-file format for both input and output object
files. ld's mechanisms (the -b or -format options
for input files, the TARGET command in linker scripts for output
files, the GNUTARGET environment variable) are more flexible, but
but it accepts (and ignores) the -F option flag for compatibility
with scripts written to call the old linker.
- -format input-format
-
Synonym for -b input-format.
- -g
-
Accepted, but ignored; provided for compatibility with other tools.
- -i
-
Perform an incremental link (same as option -r).
- -lar
-
Add an archive file ar to the list of files to link. This
option may be used any number of times. ld will search its
path-list for occurrences of libar.a for every ar
specified.
- -Lsearchdir
-
This command adds path searchdir to the list of paths that
ld will search for archive libraries. You may use this option
any number of times.
The default set of paths searched (without being specified with
-L) depends on what emulation mode ld is using, and in
some cases also on how it was configured. The
paths can also be specified in a link script with the SEARCH_DIR
command.
- -M
-
- -m
-
Print (to the standard output file) a link map---diagnostic information
about where symbols are mapped by ld, and information on global
common storage allocation.
- -N
-
specifies readable and writable text and data sections. If
the output format supports Unix style magic numbers, the output is
marked as OMAGIC.
When you use the `-N' option, the linker does not page-align the
data segment.
- -n
-
sets the text segment to be read only, and NMAGIC is written
if possible.
- -noinhibit-exec
-
Normally, the linker will not produce an output file if it encounters
errors during the link process. With this flag, you can specify that
you wish the output file retained even after non-fatal errors.
- -o output
-
output
output is a name for the program produced by ld; if this
option is not specified, the name `a.out' is used by default. The
script command OUTPUT can also specify the output file name.
- -R filename
-
file
Read symbol names and their addresses from filename, but do not
relocate it or include it in the output. This allows your output file
to refer symbolically to absolute locations of memory defined in other
programs.
- -relax
-
An option with machine dependent effects. Currently this option is only
supported on the H8/300.
On some platforms, use this option to perform global optimizations that
become possible when the linker resolves addressing in your program, such
as relaxing address modes and synthesizing new instructions in the
output object file.
On platforms where this is not supported, `-relax' is accepted, but has no effect.
- -r
-
Generates relocatable output---i.e., generate an output file that can in
turn serve as input to ld. This is often called partial
linking. As a side effect, in environments that support standard Unix
magic numbers, this option also sets the output file's magic number to
OMAGIC.
If this option is not specified, an absolute file is produced. When
linking C++ programs, this option will not resolve references to
constructors; -Ur is an alternative.
This option does the same as -i.
- -S
-
Omits debugger symbol information (but not all symbols) from the output file.
- -s
-
Omits all symbol information from the output file.
- { script }
-
You can, if you wish, include a script of linker commands directly in
the command line instead of referring to it via an input file. When the
character `{' occurs on the command line, the linker switches to
interpreting the command language until the end of the list of commands
is reached---flagged with a closing brace `}'. Other command-line
options will not be recognized while parsing the script.
See the `ld' entry in `info', or the manual
ld: the GNU linker
, for a description of the command language.
- -Tbss org
-
- -Tdata org
-
- -Ttext org
-
Use org as the starting address for---respectively---the
bss, data, or the text segment of the output file.
textorg must be a hexadecimal integer.
- -T commandfile
-
- -Tcommandfile
-
Equivalent to -c commandfile; supported for compatibility with
other tools.
- -t
-
Prints names of input files as ld processes them.
- -u sym
-
Forces sym to be entered in the output file as an undefined symbol.
This may, for example, trigger linking of additional modules from
standard libraries. -u may be repeated with different option
arguments to enter additional undefined symbols.
- -Ur
-
For anything other than C++ programs, this option is equivalent to
-r: it generates relocatable output---i.e., an output file that can in
turn serve as input to ld. When linking C++ programs, -Ur
will resolve references to constructors, unlike -r.
- -v
-
Display the version number for ld.
- -X
-
If -s or -S is also specified, delete only local symbols
beginning with `L'.
- -x
-
If -s or -S is also specified, delete all local symbols,
not just those beginning with `L'.
ENVIRONMENT
ld always consults two environment variables: GNUTARGET
and LDEMULATION. Depending on the setting of the latter, other
environment variables may be used as well.
GNUTARGET determines the input-file object format if you don't
use -b (or its synonym -format). Its value should be one
of the BFD names for an input format. If there is no
GNUTARGET in the environment, ld uses the natural format
of the host. If GNUTARGET is set to default then BFD attempts to discover the
input format by examining binary input files; this method often
succeeds, but there are potential ambiguities, since there is no method
of ensuring that the magic number used to flag object-file formats is
unique. However, the configuration procedure for BFD on each system
places the conventional format for that system first in the search-list,
so ambiguities are resolved in favor of convention.
LDEMULATION controls some aspects of ld's dominant
personality. Although ld is flexible enough to permit its use
in many contexts regardless of configuration, you can use this variable
to make it act more like one or another older linker by default.
In particular, the value of LDEMULATION controls what default
linker script is used (thereby controlling the default input and output
formats; ; what default paths are searched for
archive libraries; and in some cases whether additional linker script
commands are available.
Here is the current set of emulations available:
- LDEMULATION=gld
-
Emulate the older GNU linker. When this emulation is selected, the
default library search paths are
/lib
/usr/lib
/usr/local/lib/lib
The default output format is set to a.out-generic-big, and the
default machine is the system's configured BFD default.
- LDEMULATION=gld68k
-
A variant of the gld emulation; only differs in specifically
setting the default BFD machine as m68k.
- LDEMULATION=gld960
-
Emulate the Intel port of the older gld for the i960
architectures. The default library search paths are taken from two
other environment variables, G960LIB and G960BASE. The
default architecture is i960. The default output format is set
to b.out.big, and in fact the default output file name (if
-o is not specified) is b.out, to reflect this variant
format, for this emulation.
This emulation can behave slightly differently depending on the setting
of the ld compile-time switch GNU960. If ld is
compiled with GNU960 defined, then an additional environment
variable---GNUTARGET---is available; its value, if available,
specifies some other default output format than b.out.big.
- LDEMULATION=gldm88kbcs
-
Sets the output format to m88kbcs and the architecture to
m88k. Default library search paths are
/lib
/usr/lib
/usr/local/lib
- LDEMULATION=lnk960
-
Emulate the Intel linker lnk960. The default output format is
coff-Intel-big. With this emulation, ld
supports the additional script commands HLL and SYSLIB for
specification of library archives. This is the only emulation with
extensive support for the -A (architecture) command-line option.
By default, the architecture CORE is assumed, but you can choose
additional features from the i960 architecture family by using one of
the following with -A (or by using the OUTPUT_ARCH command
from a script):
CORE
KB
SB
MC
XA
CA
KA
SA
The default libraries are chosen with some attention to the architecture
selected; the core library `cg' is always included, but the library
fpg is also used if you've specified any of the architectures
KA, SA, or CA.
Like gld960, this emulation uses additional environment variables
to set the default library search paths. Also like gld960, the
behavior of this emulation is slightly different depending on whether
ld itself was compiled with GNU960 defined.
If your ld was compiled with GNU960 defined, the default
paths are taken from all three of G960LIB, G960BASE, and
I960BASE. For the first two, paths you supply are automatically
suffixed with `/lib/libcoff'; for the last, your path is
automatically suffixed with `/lib'.
If your ld was not compiled with GNU960 defined,
the default paths are taken from I960BASE, and G960BASE is
only consulted if I960BASE is undefined. In this case
G960LIB is not used at all.
- LDEMULATION=vanilla
-
This is the least specific setting for ld. You can set
LDEMULATION=vanilla to disable emulation of other linkers. This
setting makes ld take the default machine from the BFD
configuration on your system; a.out-generic-big is the default
target. No other defaults are specified.
SEE ALSO
objdump(1)
`ld' and `binutils'
entries in
info
ld: the GNU linker, Steve Chamberlain and Roland Pesch;
The GNU Binary Utilities, Roland H. Pesch.
COPYING
Copyright (c) 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
versions, except that this permission notice may be included in
translations approved by the Free Software Foundation instead of in
the original English.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- ENVIRONMENT
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- COPYING
-
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