According to gABI, in a note entry, the note name field, not note name
size, is padded for the note descriptor. And the note descriptor field,
not note descriptor size, is padded for the next note entry. Also notes
are aligned to 4 bytes in 32-bit objects and 8 bytes in 64-bit objects.
Since on Linux, .note.ABI-tag and .note.gnu.build-id notes are always
aligned to 4 bytes, we need to use alignment of note section or note
segment, instead of assuming alignment based on ELF file class.
Tested on i686 and x86-64.
bfd/
PR binutils/22444
* elf.c (elf_read_notes): Add an argument for note aligment.
(elf_parse_notes): Likewise.
(_bfd_elf_make_section_from_shdr): Pass section aligment to
elf_parse_notes.
(bfd_section_from_phdr): Pass segment aligment to elf_read_notes.
(elf_parse_notes): Add an argument for note aligment. Use
ELF_NOTE_DESC_OFFSET to get the offset of the note descriptor.
Use ELF_NOTE_NEXT_OFFSET to get the offset of the next note
entry.
(elf_read_notes): Add an argument for note aligment and pass it
to elf_parse_notes.
binutils/
PR binutils/22444
* readelf.c (process_notes_at): Use ELF_NOTE_DESC_OFFSET to get
the offset of the note descriptor. Use ELF_NOTE_NEXT_OFFSET to
get the offset of the next note entry.
include/
PR binutils/22444
* elf/external.h (ELF_ALIGN_UP): New.
(ELF_NOTE_DESC_OFFSET): Likewise.
(ELF_NOTE_NEXT_OFFSET): Likewise.
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BFD is an object file library. It permits applications to use the
same routines to process object files regardless of their format.
BFD is used by the GNU debugger, assembler, linker, and the binary
utilities.
The documentation on using BFD is scanty and may be occasionally
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rewritten manual, would be appreciated.
There is some BFD internals documentation in doc/bfdint.texi which may
help programmers who want to modify BFD.
BFD is normally built as part of another package. See the build
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BFD supports the following configure options:
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a configuration target triplet, such as sparc-sun-solaris.
--enable-targets=TARGET,TARGET,TARGET...
Additional targets the library should support. To include
support for all known targets, use --enable-targets=all.
--enable-64-bit-bfd
Include support for 64 bit targets. This is automatically
turned on if you explicitly request a 64 bit target, but not
for --enable-targets=all. This requires a compiler with a 64
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--enable-shared
Build BFD as a shared library.
--with-mmap
Use mmap when accessing files. This is faster on some hosts,
but slower on others. It may not work on all hosts.
Report bugs with BFD to bug-binutils@gnu.org.
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Bug reports without patches will be remembered, but they may never get
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