GCC question
Jean-Christophe PLAGNIOL-VILLARD
plagnioj at jcrosoft.com
Thu Jan 10 07:36:34 EST 2013
On 10:02 Wed 09 Jan , Franck Jullien wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a question not directly related to Barebox but I think I can
> find some answer here: )
>
> I would like to use initcalls in a Linux user's land program on a x86 target.
>
> I'm doing something like this:
>
> #ifndef _INIT_H
> #define _INIT_H
>
> typedef int (*initcall_t)(void);
>
> extern initcall_t __start_target, __stop_target;
>
> #define target_initcall(fn) static initcall_t _##fn \
> __attribute__((used)) \
> __attribute__ ((section("target"))) = fn
>
> #endif
>
> then:
>
> initcall_t *initcall;
>
> for (initcall = &__start_target;
> initcall < &__stop_target; initcall++) {
> printf("initcall-> %p\n", *initcall);
> ret = (*initcall)();
> if (ret)
> printf("initcall %p failed: %d\n", *initcall, ret);
> }
>
> Everything looks fine except the linker removes the function
> "initcalled" because it is not
> referenced anywhere and this is normal.
>
> I have not modified the linker script (I'm using the default one). I'm
> using auto generated
> __start_target and __stop_target symbols generated by the linker.
>
> My question is: why does it work in barebox ? For example, in
> nios2/generic.c we have only
> static function and initcalls. So why the linker does optimize out
> those functions ? Is it
> because we have initcall corresponding sections in the linker script ?
on userspace you can use directly the contructor
Best Regards,
J.
More information about the barebox
mailing list