gecko/mozglue/build/Makefile.in

161 lines
5.6 KiB
Makefile

#
# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
# License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
# file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
DIST_INSTALL = 1
# For FORCE_SHARED_LIB
include $(topsrcdir)/config/config.mk
MOZ_GLUE_LDFLAGS = # Don't link against ourselves
ifneq (,$(ZLIB_IN_MOZGLUE)$(MOZ_LINKER))
ifdef MOZ_NATIVE_ZLIB
EXTRA_LIBS += $(MOZ_ZLIB_LIBS)
endif
endif
ifeq (WINNT,$(OS_TARGET))
mozglue.def: mozglue.def.in
$(call py_action,preprocessor,$(if $(MOZ_REPLACE_MALLOC),-DMOZ_REPLACE_MALLOC) $(ACDEFINES) $< -o $@)
GARBAGE += mozglue.def
ifneq (,$(filter -DEFAULTLIB:mozcrt,$(MOZ_GLUE_LDFLAGS)))
# Don't install the import library if we use mozcrt
NO_INSTALL_IMPORT_LIBRARY = 1
endif
OS_LIBS += \
$(call EXPAND_LIBNAME,version) \
$(NULL)
endif
ifeq (Darwin_1,$(OS_TARGET)_$(MOZ_REPLACE_MALLOC))
OS_LDFLAGS += \
-Wl,-U,_replace_init \
-Wl,-U,_replace_malloc \
-Wl,-U,_replace_posix_memalign \
-Wl,-U,_replace_aligned_alloc \
-Wl,-U,_replace_calloc \
-Wl,-U,_replace_realloc \
-Wl,-U,_replace_free \
-Wl,-U,_replace_memalign \
-Wl,-U,_replace_valloc \
-Wl,-U,_replace_malloc_usable_size \
-Wl,-U,_replace_malloc_good_size \
-Wl,-U,_replace_jemalloc_stats \
-Wl,-U,_replace_jemalloc_purge_freed_pages \
-Wl,-U,_replace_jemalloc_free_dirty_pages \
$(NULL)
ifneq ($(MOZ_REPLACE_MALLOC_LINKAGE),compiler support)
OS_LDFLAGS += -flat_namespace
endif
ifeq ($(MOZ_REPLACE_MALLOC_LINKAGE),dummy library)
OS_LDFLAGS += -Wl,-weak_library,$(DEPTH)/memory/replace/dummy/$(DLL_PREFIX)replace_malloc$(DLL_SUFFIX)
endif
endif
ifeq (android, $(MOZ_WIDGET_TOOLKIT))
# To properly wrap jemalloc's pthread_atfork call.
OS_LDFLAGS += -Wl,--wrap=pthread_atfork
endif
ifdef MOZ_LINKER
ifeq (arm, $(TARGET_CPU))
OS_LDFLAGS += -Wl,-version-script,$(srcdir)/arm-eabi-filter
endif
endif
ifeq (Android, $(OS_TARGET))
WRAP_LDFLAGS := $(filter -Wl%,$(WRAP_LDFLAGS))
endif
include $(topsrcdir)/config/rules.mk
ifdef MOZ_MEMORY
ifeq (WINNT,$(OS_TARGET))
# Roll our own custom logic here for the import library
###############################################################################
#
# Linking Mozilla itself to jemalloc is not particularly difficult. To do this
# we avoid linking directly to the Microsoft-provided CRT import libraries.
# Instead, we link to our own import library which we generate here. To
# replace the CRT's malloc/free/other memory management symbols we export
# our own versions out of jemalloc.dll. We then take the import library that
# the compiler generates for jemalloc.dll and combine it with the MS CRT import
# libraries. We put our library on the command line first, and the CRT symbols
# are discarded in favor of our versions!
#
# Unfortunately that was too easy. The CRT import library is not a standard
# import library that contains a list of symbols and whatnot. It also includes
# object files that are linked into generated programs. One of these,
# crtdll.obj is (as one might expect) linked into all DLLs that link against
# the CRT. This file does things like run static C++ constructors when the
# DLL is attached, call DllMain, etc.
#
# In the CRT source all malloc/free calls are made to malloc_crt and free_crt.
# In debug builds these are both defined to malloc_dbg and free_dbg. In opt
# builds malloc_crt is an actual function, implemented and exposed from the
# CRT. free_crt is, however, defined to be just plain old free. This works
# fine inside the CRT where malloc_crt and free operate on the same heap.
# Outside the CRT malloc_crt is in the CRT's heap, but free is in jemalloc's
# heap. This causes much pain at shutdown :-(
#
# The obvious solution here is to override malloc_crt too. Unfortunately,
# that doesn't work because the CRT expects to be able to call msize on this
# piece of memory deep inside the CRT, which will fail because it'll call the
# CRT's msize on a pointer in jemalloc's heap.
#
# Our solution to this is quite devious. We take apart the CRT's import lib
# and remove the problematic object file. We then poke at the object file's
# symbol table and replace '__imp__free' (which means grab free from some
# other DLL) with '__imp__frex'. Then we define our own dummy no-op function
# in jemalloc.dll and export it as frex. Then we put the CRT import lib
# back together with the patched crtdll.obj, glue it to the end of jemalloc's
# import library and link the rest of Mozilla to that.
#
# The result? A binary that uses jemalloc, doesn't crash, and leaks a tiny
# amount of memory (32 words per DLL in the 2010 CRT) at shutdown.
#
###############################################################################
target:: mozcrt.lib
$(INSTALL) $(IFLAGS2) mozcrt.lib $(DIST)/lib
# And finally combine that with the jemalloc import library to get an import
# library that has our malloc/free/etc and the CRT's everything else
mozcrt.lib: $(IMPORT_LIBRARY) msvc_modified.lib
lib -OUT:$@ $^
# Put the fixed object file back in
msvc_modified.lib: msvc_removed.lib crtdll_fixed.obj
lib -OUT:$@ $^
# Fix the object file
crtdll_fixed.obj: crtdll.obj
$(PYTHON) $(srcdir)/fixcrt.py
# Find the path of crtdll.obj
CRTDLL_FULLPATH=$(subst \,\\,$(shell lib -list msvc_combined.lib | grep crtdll\\.obj))
# Remove the broken object file, only after we have extracted it
msvc_removed.lib: msvc_combined.lib crtdll.obj
lib -OUT:$@ msvc_combined.lib -REMOVE:$(CRTDLL_FULLPATH)
# Extract the broken object file out of the combined library
crtdll.obj: msvc_combined.lib
lib -OUT:$@ $^ -EXTRACT:$(CRTDLL_FULLPATH)
# Grab both CRT libraries and combine them into one library to simplify things
msvc_combined.lib:
lib -OUT:$@ $(WIN32_CRT_LIBS)
endif
endif # MOZ_MEMORY