-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.9k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
linker: Link dylib crates by path #126094
Conversation
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
Sigh, on Linux if a dynamic library A is linked into a binary B via path, then that entire path gets into B's |
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
83ba8e5
to
57f5026
Compare
In the meantime let's test on some more targets. |
This comment has been minimized.
This comment has been minimized.
5950f0d
to
e776337
Compare
@rustbot ready |
This comment was marked as resolved.
This comment was marked as resolved.
@bors r=michaelwoerister |
🌲 The tree is currently closed for pull requests below priority 100. This pull request will be tested once the tree is reopened. |
☀️ Test successful - checks-actions |
Finished benchmarking commit (1086aff): comparison URL. Overall result: no relevant changes - no action needed@rustbot label: -perf-regression Instruction countThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. Max RSS (memory usage)Results (primary -3.1%, secondary -2.8%)This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.
CyclesResults (secondary -2.2%)This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.
Binary sizeThis benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric. Bootstrap: 726.158s -> 706.903s (-2.65%) |
linker: Link dylib crates by path Linkers seem to support linking dynamic libraries by path. Not sure why the previous scheme with splitting the path into a directory (passed with `-L`) and a name (passed with `-l`) was used (upd: likely due to rust-lang/rust#126094 (comment)). When we split a library path `some/dir/libfoo.so` into `-L some/dir` and `-l foo` we add `some/dir` to search directories for *all* libraries looked up by the linker, not just `foo`, and `foo` is also looked up in *all* search directories not just `some/dir`. Technically we may find some unintended libraries this way. Therefore linking dylibs via a full path is both simpler and more reliable. It also makes the set of search directories more easily reproducible when we need to lookup some native library manually (like in rust-lang/rust#123436).
…-mingw-import-libraries, r=petrochenkov linker: Allow MSVC to use import libraries following the Meson/MinGW convention Hi all, This PR implements support for `MsvcLinker` to use import libraries following Meson and the MinGW toolchain's naming convention. Meson [follows the `libfoo.dll.a` naming convention](https://mesonbuild.com/FAQ.html#why-does-building-my-project-with-msvc-output-static-libraries-called-libfooa) to disambiguate between static and import libraries. This support already existed for static libraries (see rust-lang#100101), but not for dynamic libraries. The latter case was added by duplicating the logic in `native_libs::find_native_static_library`, but a separate case was added in `link_dylib_by_name` for the Windows CRT libraries which must be handled by the linker itself. See for prerequisites rust-lang#129366, rust-lang#126094, and rust-lang#128370. All feedback is appreciated! Fixes rust-lang#122455 cc `@sdroege` `@nirbheek`
…-mingw-import-libraries, r=petrochenkov linker: Allow MSVC to use import libraries following the Meson/MinGW convention Hi all, This PR implements support for `MsvcLinker` to use import libraries following Meson and the MinGW toolchain's naming convention. Meson [follows the `libfoo.dll.a` naming convention](https://mesonbuild.com/FAQ.html#why-does-building-my-project-with-msvc-output-static-libraries-called-libfooa) to disambiguate between static and import libraries. This support already existed for static libraries (see rust-lang#100101), but not for dynamic libraries. The latter case was added by duplicating the logic in `native_libs::find_native_static_library`, but a separate case was added in `link_dylib_by_name` for the Windows CRT libraries which must be handled by the linker itself. See for prerequisites rust-lang#129366, rust-lang#126094, and rust-lang#128370. All feedback is appreciated! Fixes rust-lang#122455 cc `@sdroege` `@nirbheek`
…nd-mingw-import-libraries, r=petrochenkov linker: Allow MSVC to use import libraries following the Meson/MinGW convention Hi all, This PR implements support for `MsvcLinker` to use import libraries following Meson and the MinGW toolchain's naming convention. Meson [follows the `libfoo.dll.a` naming convention](https://mesonbuild.com/FAQ.html#why-does-building-my-project-with-msvc-output-static-libraries-called-libfooa) to disambiguate between static and import libraries. This support already existed for static libraries (see rust-lang#100101), but not for dynamic libraries. The latter case was added by duplicating the logic in `native_libs::find_native_static_library`, but a separate case was added in `link_dylib_by_name` for the Windows CRT libraries which must be handled by the linker itself. See for prerequisites rust-lang#129366, rust-lang#126094, and rust-lang#128370. All feedback is appreciated! Fixes rust-lang#122455 cc `@sdroege` `@nirbheek`
Rollup merge of rust-lang#123436 - amyspark:allow-msvc-to-use-meson-and-mingw-import-libraries, r=petrochenkov linker: Allow MSVC to use import libraries following the Meson/MinGW convention Hi all, This PR implements support for `MsvcLinker` to use import libraries following Meson and the MinGW toolchain's naming convention. Meson [follows the `libfoo.dll.a` naming convention](https://mesonbuild.com/FAQ.html#why-does-building-my-project-with-msvc-output-static-libraries-called-libfooa) to disambiguate between static and import libraries. This support already existed for static libraries (see rust-lang#100101), but not for dynamic libraries. The latter case was added by duplicating the logic in `native_libs::find_native_static_library`, but a separate case was added in `link_dylib_by_name` for the Windows CRT libraries which must be handled by the linker itself. See for prerequisites rust-lang#129366, rust-lang#126094, and rust-lang#128370. All feedback is appreciated! Fixes rust-lang#122455 cc `@sdroege` `@nirbheek`
Dropping a quick reference here, the new "cdylib" I will probably file an issue about this, if nobody beats me to it, although I'm not certain what the resolution should be. On the rpm side, it's also possible to filter out such provides, but it was unexpected that this might be needed. |
The basic problem is that Cargo doesn't have a way to designate a target as a "module" instead of a "library". It just has "cdylib", which is supposed to be linked. Modules should not be linked (except on Android). For example, in CMake, you have "shared library" and "module library" as separate concepts. Similarly in Meson you have There are a number of differences between the two, not just SONAME, for example undefined symbols are allowed in Also, answering some suggestions in that bug, I think it is a mistake to pawn-off these duties to
|
Setting soname for cdylibs wasn't strictly necessary for this PR (I asked about this in #126094 (comment)). |
The problem is that all uses of cdylib targets built by rustc we have in Fedora are either
So the fact that this behaviour was flipped from "not set unless set explicitly" in Rust itself to "set always" breaks the expectations for the second case, and it's apparently not easy to fix "in post" because |
@lu-zero what do you think about setting soname here? Should we revert that part of the change? |
For Generally would be great to have a simpler mean to set/unset the value and in the long run would be even better to be able to say |
I've attempted this in #130960. |
Only add an automatic SONAME for Rust dylibs rust-lang#126094 added an automatic relative `SONAME` to all dynamic libraries, but it was really only needed for Rust `--crate-type="dylib"`. In Fedora, it was a surprise to see `SONAME` on `"cdylib"` libraries like Python modules, especially because that generates an undesirable RPM `Provides`. We can instead add a `SONAME` just for Rust dylibs by passing the crate-type argument farther. Ref: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2314879
Rollup merge of rust-lang#130960 - cuviper:cdylib-soname, r=petrochenkov Only add an automatic SONAME for Rust dylibs rust-lang#126094 added an automatic relative `SONAME` to all dynamic libraries, but it was really only needed for Rust `--crate-type="dylib"`. In Fedora, it was a surprise to see `SONAME` on `"cdylib"` libraries like Python modules, especially because that generates an undesirable RPM `Provides`. We can instead add a `SONAME` just for Rust dylibs by passing the crate-type argument farther. Ref: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2314879
Linkers seem to support linking dynamic libraries by path.
Not sure why the previous scheme with splitting the path into a directory (passed with
-L
) and a name (passed with-l
) was used (upd: likely due to #126094 (comment)).When we split a library path
some/dir/libfoo.so
into-L some/dir
and-l foo
we addsome/dir
to search directories for all libraries looked up by the linker, not justfoo
, andfoo
is also looked up in all search directories not justsome/dir
.Technically we may find some unintended libraries this way.
Therefore linking dylibs via a full path is both simpler and more reliable.
It also makes the set of search directories more easily reproducible when we need to lookup some native library manually (like in #123436).