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LD(1)			     GNU Development Tools			 LD(1)

NAME
       ld - Using LD, the GNU linker

SYNOPSIS
       ld [options] objfile ...

DESCRIPTION
       ld  combines a number of	object and archive files, relocates their data
       and ties	up symbol references. Usually the last	step  in  compiling  a
       program is to run ld.

       ld  accepts  Linker  Command  Language  files  written in a superset of
       AT&T's Link Editor Command Language syntax, to provide explicit and to-
       tal 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.

       Aside  from  its	flexibility, the GNU linker is more helpful than other
       linkers in providing diagnostic information.  Many linkers abandon exe-
       cution 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.

OPTIONS
       The  linker  supports a plethora	of command-line	options, 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	 stan-
       dard,  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.	(See the discussion of
       the -l option below.)

       Some of the command-line	options	to ld may be specified at any point in
       the command line.  However, options which refer to files, such as -l or
       -T, cause the file to be	read at	the point at which the option  appears
       in  the	command	 line, relative	to the object files and	other file op-
       tions.  Repeating non-file options with a different argument  will  ei-
       ther  have no further effect, or	override prior occurrences (those fur-
       ther to the left	on the command line) of	that  option.	Options	 which
       may  be meaningfully specified more than	once are noted in the descrip-
       tions below.

       Non-option arguments are	object files  or  archives  which  are	to  be
       linked  together.   They	 may follow, precede, or be mixed in with com-
       mand-line options, except that an  object  file	argument  may  not  be
       placed between an option	and its	argument.

       Usually	the  linker  is	invoked	with at	least one object file, but you
       can specify other forms of binary input files using  -l,	 -R,  and  the
       script  command	language.   If no binary input files at	all are	speci-
       fied, the linker	does not produce any output, and issues	the message No
       input files.

       If the linker can not recognize the format of an	object file,  it  will
       assume that it is a linker script.  A script specified in this way aug-
       ments  the  main	 linker	 script	 used for the link (either the default
       linker script or	the one	specified by using -T).	 This feature  permits
       the  linker  to link against a file which appears to be an object or an
       archive,	but actually merely defines some symbol	values,	or  uses  "IN-
       PUT"  or	 "GROUP" to load other objects.	 Note that specifying a	script
       in this way merely augments the main linker script; use the  -T	option
       to replace the default linker script entirely.

       For  options whose names	are a single letter, option arguments must ei-
       ther follow the option letter without  intervening  whitespace,	or  be
       given  as  separate arguments immediately following the option that re-
       quires them.

       For options whose names are multiple letters, either one	 dash  or  two
       can   precede   the   option   name;  for  example,  -trace-symbol  and
       --trace-symbol are equivalent.  Note - there is one exception  to  this
       rule.   Multiple	 letter	 options  that start with a lower case 'o' can
       only be preceeded by two	dashes.	 This is to reduce confusion with  the
       -o  option.   So	for example -omagic sets the output file name to magic
       whereas --omagic	sets the NMAGIC	flag on	the output.

       Arguments to multiple-letter options must either	be separated from  the
       option  name by an equals sign, or be given as separate arguments imme-
       diately	following  the	option	that  requires	them.	For   example,
       --trace-symbol  foo  and	--trace-symbol=foo are equivalent.  Unique ab-
       breviations of the names	of multiple-letter options are accepted.

       Note - if the linker is being invoked indirectly, via a compiler	driver
       (eg gcc)	then all the linker command line options should	be prefixed by
       -Wl, (or	whatever is appropriate	for the	 particular  compiler  driver)
       like this:

		 gcc -Wl,--startgroup foo.o bar.o -Wl,--endgroup

       This  is	 important,  because otherwise the compiler driver program may
       silently	drop the linker	options, resulting in a	bad link.

       Here is a table of the generic command line switches  accepted  by  the
       GNU linker:

       -akeyword
	   This	 option	is supported for HP/UX compatibility.  The keyword ar-
	   gument must be one of the  strings  archive,	 shared,  or  default.
	   -aarchive is	functionally equivalent	to -Bstatic, and the other two
	   keywords are	functionally equivalent	to -Bdynamic.  This option may
	   be used any number of times.

       -Aarchitecture
       --architecture=architecture
	   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 identifies the	particular architecture	in the
	   960	family,	enabling some safeguards and modifying the archive-li-
	   brary search	path.

	   Future releases of ld may support similar functionality  for	 other
	   architecture	families.

       -b input-format
       --format=input-format
	   ld  may be configured to support more than one kind of object file.
	   If your ld is configured this way, you can use  the	-b  option  to
	   specify  the	 binary	format for input object	files that follow this
	   option on the command line.	Even when ld is	configured to  support
	   alternative object formats, you don't usually need to specify this,
	   as  ld should be 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.
	   (You	can list the available binary formats with objdump -i.)

	   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 ex-
	   plicitly (when linking object files of different formats),  by  in-
	   cluding -b input-format before each group of	object files in	a par-
	   ticular format.

	   The	default	format is taken	from the environment variable "GNUTAR-
	   GET".

	   You can also	define the input format	from a script, using the  com-
	   mand	"TARGET";

       -c MRI-commandfile
       --mri-script=MRI-commandfile
	   For	compatibility  with linkers produced by	MRI, ld	accepts	script
	   files written in an alternate,  restricted  command	language,  de-
	   scribed  in the MRI Compatible Script Files section of GNU ld docu-
	   mentation.  Introduce MRI script files with the option -c; use  the
	   -T  option  to run linker scripts written in	the general-purpose ld
	   scripting language.	If MRI-cmdfile does not	exist, ld looks	for it
	   in the directories specified	by any -L options.

       -d
       -dc
       -dp These three options are equivalent; multiple	 forms	are  supported
	   for	compatibility with other linkers.  They	assign space to	common
	   symbols even	if a relocatable output	file is	specified  (with  -r).
	   The script command "FORCE_COMMON_ALLOCATION"	has the	same effect.

       -e entry
       --entry=entry
	   Use	entry  as  the explicit	symbol for beginning execution of your
	   program, rather than	the default entry point.  If there is no  sym-
	   bol	named  entry,  the linker will try to parse entry as a number,
	   and use that	as the entry address (the number will  be  interpreted
	   in  base  10;  you may use a	leading	0x for base 16,	or a leading 0
	   for base 8).

       -E
       --export-dynamic
	   When	creating a dynamically linked executable, add all  symbols  to
	   the	dynamic	 symbol	table.	The dynamic symbol table is the	set of
	   symbols which are visible from dynamic objects at run time.

	   If you do not use this option, the dynamic symbol table  will  nor-
	   mally  contain  only	those symbols which are	referenced by some dy-
	   namic object	mentioned in the link.

	   If you use "dlopen" to load a dynamic object	which needs  to	 refer
	   back	 to the	symbols	defined	by the program,	rather than some other
	   dynamic object, then	you will probably need to use this option when
	   linking the program itself.

	   You can also	use the	version	script to control what symbols	should
	   be  added to	the dynamic symbol table if the	output format supports
	   it.	See the	description of --version-script	in @ref{VERSION}.

       -EB Link	big-endian objects.  This affects the default output format.

       -EL Link	little-endian objects.	This affects the default  output  for-
	   mat.

       -f
       --auxiliary name
	   When	 creating  an ELF shared object, set the internal DT_AUXILIARY
	   field to the	specified name.	 This tells the	 dynamic  linker  that
	   the	symbol	table of the shared object should be used as an	auxil-
	   iary	filter on the symbol table of the shared object	name.

	   If you later	link a program against this filter object, then,  when
	   you	run  the program, the dynamic linker will see the DT_AUXILIARY
	   field.  If the dynamic linker resolves any symbols from the	filter
	   object,  it	will  first check whether there	is a definition	in the
	   shared object name.	If there is one, it will be  used  instead  of
	   the	definition  in the filter object.  The shared object name need
	   not exist.  Thus the	shared object name may be used to  provide  an
	   alternative implementation of certain functions, perhaps for	debug-
	   ging	or for machine specific	performance.

	   This	 option	may be specified more than once.  The DT_AUXILIARY en-
	   tries will be created in the	order in which they appear on the com-
	   mand	line.

       -F name
       --filter	name
	   When	creating an ELF	shared	object,	 set  the  internal  DT_FILTER
	   field  to  the  specified name.  This tells the dynamic linker that
	   the symbol table of the shared object which is being	created	should
	   be used as a	filter on the symbol table of the shared object	name.

	   If you later	link a program against this filter object, then,  when
	   you	run  the  program,  the	 dynamic linker	will see the DT_FILTER
	   field.  The dynamic linker will resolve symbols  according  to  the
	   symbol  table  of  the filter object	as usual, but it will actually
	   link	to the definitions found in the	shared object name.  Thus  the
	   filter  object  can	be used	to select a subset of the symbols pro-
	   vided by the	object name.

	   Some	older linkers used the	-F  option  throughout	a  compilation
	   toolchain for specifying object-file	format for both	input and out-
	   put	object	files.	 The GNU linker	uses other mechanisms for this
	   purpose: the	-b, --format, --oformat	options, the "TARGET"  command
	   in  linker  scripts,	and the	"GNUTARGET" environment	variable.  The
	   GNU linker will ignore the -F  option  when	not  creating  an  ELF
	   shared object.

       -fini name
	   When	 creating  an  ELF executable or shared	object,	call NAME when
	   the executable or shared object is unloaded,	by setting DT_FINI  to
	   the	address	 of the	function.  By default, the linker uses "_fini"
	   as the function to call.

       -g  Ignored.  Provided for compatibility	with other tools.

       -Gvalue
       --gpsize=value
	   Set the maximum size	of objects to be optimized using the GP	regis-
	   ter to size.	 This is only meaningful for object file formats  such
	   as  MIPS  ECOFF which supports putting large	and small objects into
	   different sections.	This is	ignored	for other object file formats.

       -hname
       -soname=name
	   When	creating an ELF	shared	object,	 set  the  internal  DT_SONAME
	   field  to  the specified name.  When	an executable is linked	with a
	   shared object which has a DT_SONAME field, then when	the executable
	   is run the dynamic linker will attempt to load  the	shared	object
	   specified  by  the  DT_SONAME  field	rather than the	using the file
	   name	given to the linker.

       -i  Perform an incremental link (same as	option -r).

       -init name
	   When	creating an ELF	executable or shared object,  call  NAME  when
	   the	executable  or	shared object is loaded, by setting DT_INIT to
	   the address of the function.	 By default, the linker	 uses  "_init"
	   as the function to call.

       -larchive
       --library=archive
	   Add archive file archive 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 "libarchive.a" for every archive specified.

	   On systems which support shared libraries, ld may also  search  for
	   libraries  with  extensions	other than ".a".  Specifically,	on ELF
	   and SunOS systems, ld will search a directory for a library with an
	   extension of	".so" before searching for one with  an	 extension  of
	   ".a".  By convention, a ".so" extension indicates a shared library.

	   The	linker will search an archive only once, at the	location where
	   it is specified on the command line.	 If the	archive	defines	a sym-
	   bol which was undefined in some object which	 appeared  before  the
	   archive  on the command line, the linker will include the appropri-
	   ate file(s) from the	archive.  However, an undefined	symbol	in  an
	   object  appearing  later  on	 the  command  line will not cause the
	   linker to search the	archive	again.

	   See the -( option for a way to force	the linker to search  archives
	   multiple times.

	   You may list	the same archive multiple times	on the command line.

	   This	 type of archive searching is standard for Unix	linkers.  How-
	   ever, if you	are using ld on	AIX, note that it  is  different  from
	   the behaviour of the	AIX linker.

       -Lsearchdir
       --library-path=searchdir
	   Add	path  searchdir	 to  the list of paths that ld will search for
	   archive libraries and ld control scripts.  You may use this	option
	   any	number of times.  The directories are searched in the order in
	   which they are specified on the command line.   Directories	speci-
	   fied	 on  the command line are searched before the default directo-
	   ries.  All -L options apply to all -l options,  regardless  of  the
	   order in which the options appear.

	   The default set of paths searched (without being specified with -L)
	   depends on which 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.  Directories specified	this way are  searched
	   at  the  point  in  which  the linker script	appears	in the command
	   line.

       -memulation
	   Emulate the emulation linker.  You can list	the  available	emula-
	   tions with the --verbose or -V options.

	   If  the  -m	option	is  not	 used, the emulation is	taken from the
	   "LDEMULATION" environment variable, if that is defined.

	   Otherwise, the default emulation depends upon how  the  linker  was
	   configured.

       -M
       --print-map
	   Print  a  link map to the standard output.  A link map provides in-
	   formation about the link, including the following:

	      Where object files and symbols are mapped into memory.

	      How common symbols are allocated.

	      All archive members included in the link, with a	mention	of the
	       symbol which caused the archive member to be brought in.

       -n
       --nmagic
	   Turn	off page  alignment  of	 sections,  and	 mark  the  output  as
	   "NMAGIC" if possible.

       -N
       --omagic
	   Set	the text and data sections to be readable and writable.	 Also,
	   do not page-align the data segment.	If the output format  supports
	   Unix	style magic numbers, mark the output as	"OMAGIC".

       -o output
       --output=output
	   Use	output as the name for the program produced by ld; if this op-
	   tion	is not specified, the name a.out  is  used  by	default.   The
	   script command "OUTPUT" can also specify the	output file name.

       -O level
	   If  level  is  a  numeric values greater than zero ld optimizes the
	   output.  This might take significantly longer and therefore	proba-
	   bly should only be enabled for the final binary.

       -q
       --emit-relocs
	   Leave  relocation  sections and contents in fully linked exececuta-
	   bles.  Post link analysis and optimization tools may	need this  in-
	   formation in	order to perform correct modifications of executables.
	   This	results	in larger executables.

	   This	option is currently only supported on ELF platforms.

       -r
       --relocateable
	   Generate  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; to do that, use -Ur.

	   When	 an  input  file  does	not have the same format as the	output
	   file, partial linking is only supported if that input file does not
	   contain any relocations.  Different output formats can have further
	   restrictions; for example some "a.out"-based	formats	do not support
	   partial linking with	input files in other formats at	all.

	   This	option does the	same thing as -i.

       -R filename
       --just-symbols=filename
	   Read	symbol names and their addresses from filename,	but do not re-
	   locate it or	include	it in the output.   This  allows  your	output
	   file	 to refer symbolically to absolute locations of	memory defined
	   in other programs.  You may use this	option more than once.

	   For compatibility with other	ELF linkers, if	the -R option is  fol-
	   lowed  by  a	directory name,	rather than a file name, it is treated
	   as the -rpath option.

       -s
       --strip-all
	   Omit	all symbol information from the	output file.

       -S
       --strip-debug
	   Omit	debugger symbol	information (but not  all  symbols)  from  the
	   output file.

       -t
       --trace
	   Print the names of the input	files as ld processes them.

       -T scriptfile
       --script=scriptfile
	   Use scriptfile as the linker	script.	 This script replaces ld's de-
	   fault linker	script (rather than adding to it), so commandfile must
	   specify  everything	necessary  to  describe	the output file.    If
	   scriptfile does not exist in	the current directory, "ld" looks  for
	   it  in the directories specified by any preceding -L	options.  Mul-
	   tiple -T options accumulate.

       -u symbol
       --undefined=symbol
	   Force symbol	to be entered in the output file as an undefined  sym-
	   bol.	  Doing	 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.   This  op-
	   tion	is equivalent to the "EXTERN" linker script command.

       -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  does
	   resolve references to constructors, unlike -r.  It does not work to
	   use	-Ur  on	 files	that were themselves linked with -Ur; once the
	   constructor table has been built, it	cannot be added	to.   Use  -Ur
	   only	for the	last partial link, and -r for the others.

       --unique[=SECTION]
	   Creates  a separate output section for every	input section matching
	   SECTION, or if the optional wildcard	SECTION	argument  is  missing,
	   for	every  orphan  input  section.	 An  orphan section is one not
	   specifically	mentioned in a linker script.  You may use this	option
	   multiple times on the command line;	It prevents the	normal merging
	   of input sections with the same name, overriding output section as-
	   signments in	a linker script.

       -v
       --version
       -V  Display the version number for ld.  The -V option  also  lists  the
	   supported emulations.

       -x
       --discard-all
	   Delete all local symbols.

       -X
       --discard-locals
	   Delete  all temporary local symbols.	 For most targets, this	is all
	   local symbols whose names begin with	L.

       -y symbol
       --trace-symbol=symbol
	   Print the name of each linked file in which symbol  appears.	  This
	   option  may	be  given  any number of times.	 On many systems it is
	   necessary to	prepend	an underscore.

	   This	option is useful when you have an  undefined  symbol  in  your
	   link	but don't know where the reference is coming from.

       -Y path
	   Add	path  to  the default library search path.  This option	exists
	   for Solaris compatibility.

       -z keyword
	   The recognized keywords are "initfirst",  "interpose",  "loadfltr",
	   "nodefaultlib",  "nodelete",	"nodlopen", "nodump", "now", "origin",
	   "combreloc",	"nocombreloc" and "nocopyreloc".  The  other  keywords
	   are ignored for Solaris compatibility. "initfirst" marks the	object
	   to  be initialized first at runtime before any other	objects.  "in-
	   terpose" marks the object that its symbol table  interposes	before
	   all symbols but the primary executable. "loadfltr" marks the	object
	   that	 its filtees be	processed immediately at runtime.  "nodefault-
	   lib"	marks the object that the search for dependencies of this  ob-
	   ject	 will  ignore  any  default  library search paths.  "nodelete"
	   marks the object shouldn't  be  unloaded  at	 runtime.   "nodlopen"
	   marks the object not	available to "dlopen".	"nodump" marks the ob-
	   ject	 can  not  be dumped by	"dldump".  "now" marks the object with
	   the non-lazy	runtime	binding.  "origin" marks the object  may  con-
	   tain	 $ORIGIN.   "defs" disallows undefined symbols.	 "muldefs" al-
	   lows	multiple definitions.	"combreloc"  combines  multiple	 reloc
	   sections  and sorts them to make dynamic symbol lookup caching pos-
	   sible.  "nocombreloc" disables multiple reloc  sections  combining.
	   "nocopyreloc" disables production of	copy relocs.

       -( archives -)
       --start-group archives --end-group
	   The archives	should be a list of archive files.  They may be	either
	   explicit file names,	or -l options.

	   The	specified  archives are	searched repeatedly until no new unde-
	   fined references are	created.  Normally,  an	 archive  is  searched
	   only	 once  in  the order that it is	specified on the command line.
	   If a	symbol in that archive is needed to resolve an undefined  sym-
	   bol	referred  to  by an object in an archive that appears later on
	   the command line, the linker	would not be able to resolve that ref-
	   erence.  By grouping	the archives, they all be searched  repeatedly
	   until all possible references are resolved.

	   Using  this	option has a significant performance cost.  It is best
	   to use it only when there are unavoidable circular  references  be-
	   tween two or	more archives.

       -assert keyword
	   This	option is ignored for SunOS compatibility.

       -Bdynamic
       -dy
       -call_shared
	   Link	 against  dynamic libraries.  This is only meaningful on plat-
	   forms for which shared libraries are	 supported.   This  option  is
	   normally  the default on such platforms.  The different variants of
	   this	option are for compatibility with various  systems.   You  may
	   use	this option multiple times on the command line:	it affects li-
	   brary searching for -l options which	follow it.

       -Bgroup
	   Set the "DF_1_GROUP"	flag in	the "DT_FLAGS_1" entry in the  dynamic
	   section.   This causes the runtime linker to	handle lookups in this
	   object and its dependencies to be performed only inside the	group.
	   --no-undefined  is  implied.	 This option is	only meaningful	on ELF
	   platforms which support shared libraries.

       -Bstatic
       -dn
       -non_shared
       -static
	   Do not link against shared libraries.  This is only	meaningful  on
	   platforms  for which	shared libraries are supported.	 The different
	   variants of this option are for compatibility with various systems.
	   You may use this option multiple times on the command line: it  af-
	   fects library searching for -l options which	follow it.

       -Bsymbolic
	   When	 creating  a shared library, bind references to	global symbols
	   to the definition within the	shared library,	if any.	 Normally,  it
	   is  possible	for a program linked against a shared library to over-
	   ride	the definition within the shared library.  This	option is only
	   meaningful on ELF platforms which support shared libraries.

       --check-sections
       --no-check-sections
	   Asks	the linker not to check	section	addresses after	they have been
	   assigned to see if there any	overlaps.  Normally  the  linker  will
	   perform  this  check,  and if it finds any overlaps it will produce
	   suitable error messages.  The linker	does know about, and does make
	   allowances for sections in overlays.	 The default behaviour can  be
	   restored by using the command line switch --check-sections.

       --cref
	   Output a cross reference table.  If a linker	map file is being gen-
	   erated, the cross reference table is	printed	to the map file.  Oth-
	   erwise, it is printed on the	standard output.

	   The	format of the table is intentionally simple, so	that it	may be
	   easily processed by a script	if necessary.  The symbols are printed
	   out,	sorted by name.	 For each symbol, a  list  of  file  names  is
	   given.   If the symbol is defined, the first	file listed is the lo-
	   cation of the definition.  The remaining files  contain  references
	   to the symbol.

       --no-define-common
	   This	option inhibits	the assignment of addresses to common symbols.
	   The script command "INHIBIT_COMMON_ALLOCATION" has the same effect.

	   The --no-define-common option allows	decoupling the decision	to as-
	   sign	addresses to Common symbols from the choice of the output file
	   type;  otherwise a non-Relocatable output type forces assigning ad-
	   dresses to Common symbols.  Using --no-define-common	allows	Common
	   symbols  that  are  referenced from a shared	library	to be assigned
	   addresses only in the main program.	This eliminates	the unused du-
	   plicate space in the	shared library,	and also prevents any possible
	   confusion over resolving to the wrong duplicate when	there are many
	   dynamic modules with	specialized search paths  for  runtime	symbol
	   resolution.

       --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  ex-
	   isting  symbol,  or	use "+"	and "-"	to add or subtract hexadecimal
	   constants or	symbols.  If you need more elaborate expressions, con-
	   sider using the linker command language from	a script.  Note: there
	   should be no	white space between symbol, the	equals	sign  (``=''),
	   and expression.

       --demangle[=style]
       --no-demangle
	   These  options  control  whether  to	demangle symbol	names in error
	   messages and	other output.  When the	linker is told to demangle, it
	   tries to present symbol names in  a	readable  fashion:  it	strips
	   leading underscores if they are used	by the object file format, and
	   converts  C++  mangled symbol names into user readable names.  Dif-
	   ferent compilers have different mangling styles.  The optional  de-
	   mangling style argument can be used to choose an appropriate	deman-
	   gling style for your	compiler.  The linker will demangle by default
	   unless  the environment variable COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE	is set.	 These
	   options may be used to override the default.

       --dynamic-linker	file
	   Set the name	of the dynamic linker.	This is	only  meaningful  when
	   generating dynamically linked ELF executables.  The default dynamic
	   linker is normally correct; don't use this unless you know what you
	   are doing.

       --embedded-relocs
	   This	option is only meaningful when linking MIPS embedded PIC code,
	   generated  by the -membedded-pic option to the GNU compiler and as-
	   sembler.  It	causes the linker to create a table which may be  used
	   at runtime to relocate any data which was statically	initialized to
	   pointer values.  See	the code in testsuite/ld-empic for details.

       --fatal-warnings
	   Treat all warnings as errors.

       --force-exe-suffix
	   Make	sure that an output file has a .exe suffix.

	   If  a  successfully	built fully linked output file does not	have a
	   ".exe" or ".dll" suffix, this option	forces the linker to copy  the
	   output  file	to one of the same name	with a ".exe" suffix. This op-
	   tion	is useful when using unmodified	Unix makefiles on a  Microsoft
	   Windows host, since some versions of	Windows	won't run an image un-
	   less	it ends	in a ".exe" suffix.

       --no-gc-sections
       --gc-sections
	   Enable  garbage collection of unused	input sections.	 It is ignored
	   on targets that do not support this option.	 This  option  is  not
	   compatible  with  -r,  nor  should it be used with dynamic linking.
	   The default behaviour (of not performing this  garbage  collection)
	   can be restored by specifying --no-gc-sections on the command line.

       --help
	   Print  a summary of the command-line	options	on the standard	output
	   and exit.

       --target-help
	   Print a summary of all target specific options on the standard out-
	   put and exit.

       -Map mapfile
	   Print a link	map to the file	mapfile.  See the description  of  the
	   -M option, above.

       --no-keep-memory
	   ld  normally	 optimizes  for	speed over memory usage	by caching the
	   symbol tables of input files	in memory.  This option	 tells	ld  to
	   instead  optimize  for memory usage,	by rereading the symbol	tables
	   as necessary.  This may be required if ld runs out of memory	 space
	   while linking a large executable.

       --no-undefined
       -z defs
	   Normally  when  creating  a	non-symbolic shared library, undefined
	   symbols are allowed and left	to be resolved by the runtime  loader.
	   These options disallows such	undefined symbols.

       --allow-multiple-definition
       -z muldefs
	   Normally  when  a symbol is defined multiple	times, the linker will
	   report a fatal error. These options allow multiple definitions  and
	   the first definition	will be	used.

       --allow-shlib-undefined
	   Allow undefined symbols in shared objects even  when	--no-undefined
	   is  set.  The  net result will be that undefined symbols in regular
	   objects will	still trigger  an  error,  but	undefined  symbols  in
	   shared objects will be ignored.  The	implementation of no_undefined
	   makes  the  assumption  that	the runtime linker will	choke on unde-
	   fined symbols.  However there is at least one system	 (BeOS)	 where
	   undefined  symbols  in  shared libraries is normal since the	kernel
	   patches them	at load	time to	select which function is  most	appro-
	   priate  for	the  current architecture.  I.E. dynamically select an
	   appropriate memset function.	 Apparently it is also normal for HPPA
	   shared libraries to have undefined symbols.

       --no-undefined-version
	   Normally when a symbol has an undefined version,  the  linker  will
	   ignore it. This option disallows symbols with undefined version and
	   a fatal error will be issued	instead.

       --no-warn-mismatch
	   Normally  ld	 will  give an error if	you try	to link	together input
	   files that are mismatched for some  reason,	perhaps	 because  they
	   have	 been compiled for different processors	or for different endi-
	   annesses.  This option tells	ld that	it should silently permit such
	   possible errors.  This option should	only be	 used  with  care,  in
	   cases when you have taken some special action that ensures that the
	   linker errors are inappropriate.

       --no-whole-archive
	   Turn	 off  the  effect of the --whole-archive option	for subsequent
	   archive files.

       --noinhibit-exec
	   Retain the executable output	file  whenever	it  is	still  usable.
	   Normally,  the linker will not produce an output file if it encoun-
	   ters	errors during the link process;	it exits  without  writing  an
	   output file when it issues any error	whatsoever.

       -nostdlib
	   Only	search library directories explicitly specified	on the command
	   line.   Library  directories	specified in linker scripts (including
	   linker scripts specified on the command line) are ignored.

       --oformat output-format
	   ld may be configured	to support more	than one kind of object	 file.
	   If your ld is configured this way, you can use the --oformat	option
	   to specify the binary format	for the	output object file.  Even when
	   ld  is  configured to support alternative object formats, you don't
	   usually need	to specify this, as ld should be configured to produce
	   as a	default	output format the most usual format on	each  machine.
	   output-format  is  a	 text  string, the name	of a particular	format
	   supported by	the BFD	libraries.  (You can list the available	binary
	   formats with	objdump	-i.)  The script command  "OUTPUT_FORMAT"  can
	   also	specify	the output format, but this option overrides it.

       -qmagic
	   This	option is ignored for Linux compatibility.

       -Qy This	option is ignored for SVR4 compatibility.

       --relax
	   An option with machine dependent effects.  This option is only sup-
	   ported on a few targets.

	   On some platforms, the --relax option performs global optimizations
	   that	 become	 possible  when	 the linker resolves addressing	in the
	   program, such as relaxing address modes and	synthesizing  new  in-
	   structions in the output object file.

	   On  some  platforms	these  link time global	optimizations may make
	   symbolic debugging of the resulting executable impossible.  This is
	   known to be the case	for the	Matsushita MN10200 and MN10300	family
	   of processors.

	   On  platforms where this is not supported, --relax is accepted, but
	   ignored.

       --retain-symbols-file filename
	   Retain only the symbols listed in the file filename,	discarding all
	   others.  filename is	simply a flat file, with one symbol  name  per
	   line.   This	 option	 is especially useful in environments (such as
	   VxWorks) where a large global symbol	table  is  accumulated	gradu-
	   ally, to conserve run-time memory.

	   --retain-symbols-file  does	not discard undefined symbols, or sym-
	   bols	needed for relocations.

	   You may only	specify	 --retain-symbols-file	once  in  the  command
	   line.  It overrides -s and -S.

       -rpath dir
	   Add	a  directory to	the runtime library search path.  This is used
	   when	linking	an ELF executable with shared objects.	All -rpath ar-
	   guments are concatenated and	passed to the  runtime	linker,	 which
	   uses	 them  to locate shared	objects	at runtime.  The -rpath	option
	   is also used	when locating  shared  objects	which  are  needed  by
	   shared objects explicitly included in the link; see the description
	   of  the  -rpath-link	option.	 If -rpath is not used when linking an
	   ELF	executable,  the  contents   of	  the	environment   variable
	   "LD_RUN_PATH" will be used if it is defined.

	   The -rpath option may also be used on SunOS.	 By default, on	SunOS,
	   the	linker	will form a runtime search patch out of	all the	-L op-
	   tions it is given.  If a -rpath option is used, the runtime	search
	   path	 will be formed	exclusively using the -rpath options, ignoring
	   the -L options.  This can be	useful when using gcc, which adds many
	   -L options which may	be on NFS mounted filesystems.

	   For compatibility with other	ELF linkers, if	the -R option is  fol-
	   lowed  by  a	directory name,	rather than a file name, it is treated
	   as the -rpath option.

       -rpath-link DIR
	   When	using ELF or SunOS, one	shared library	may  require  another.
	   This	happens	when an	"ld -shared" link includes a shared library as
	   one of the input files.

	   When	  the  linker  encounters  such	 a  dependency	when  doing  a
	   non-shared, non-relocatable link, it	will automatically try to  lo-
	   cate	 the required shared library and include it in the link, if it
	   is not included explicitly.	In such	a case,	the -rpath-link	option
	   specifies the first set of directories to search.  The  -rpath-link
	   option may specify a	sequence of directory names either by specify-
	   ing	a  list	of names separated by colons, or by appearing multiple
	   times.

	   This	option should be used with caution as it overrides the	search
	   path	 that  may  have  been hard compiled into a shared library. In
	   such	a case it is  possible	to  use	 unintentionally  a  different
	   search path than the	runtime	linker would do.

	   The	linker	uses  the  following  search  paths to locate required
	   shared libraries.

	   1.  Any directories specified by -rpath-link	options.

	   2.  Any directories specified by -rpath  options.   The  difference
	       between -rpath and -rpath-link is that directories specified by
	       -rpath  options are included in the executable and used at run-
	       time, whereas the -rpath-link option is only effective at  link
	       time. It	is for the native linker only.

	   3.  On  an  ELF system, if the -rpath and "rpath-link" options were
	       not used, search	 the  contents	of  the	 environment  variable
	       "LD_RUN_PATH". It is for	the native linker only.

	   4.  On  SunOS, if the -rpath	option was not used, search any	direc-
	       tories specified	using -L options.

	   5.  For a native linker, the	contents of the	 environment  variable
	       "LD_LIBRARY_PATH".

	   6.  For  a  native  ELF  linker, the	directories in "DT_RUNPATH" or
	       "DT_RPATH" of a shared library  are  searched  for  shared  li-
	       braries	needed	by  it.	 The "DT_RPATH"	entries	are ignored if
	       "DT_RUNPATH" entries exist.

	   7.  The default directories,	normally /lib and /usr/lib.

	   8.  For  a  native  linker  on  an  ELF   system,   if   the	  file
	       /etc/ld.so.conf	exists,	 the list of directories found in that
	       file.

	   If the required shared library is not found,	the linker will	 issue
	   a warning and continue with the link.

       -shared
       -Bshareable
	   Create  a shared library.  This is currently	only supported on ELF,
	   XCOFF and SunOS platforms.  On SunOS, the linker will automatically
	   create a shared library if the -e option is not used	and there  are
	   undefined symbols in	the link.

       --sort-common
	   This	 option	 tells	ld  to sort the	common symbols by size when it
	   places them in the appropriate output sections.  First come all the
	   one byte symbols, then all the two byte, then all  the  four	 byte,
	   and	then everything	else.  This is to prevent gaps between symbols
	   due to alignment constraints.

       --split-by-file [size]
	   Similar to --split-by-reloc but creates a new  output  section  for
	   each	input file when	size is	reached.  size defaults	to a size of 1
	   if not given.

       --split-by-reloc	[count]
	   Tries  to creates extra sections in the output file so that no sin-
	   gle output section in the file contains  more  than	count  reloca-
	   tions.   This  is useful when generating huge relocatable files for
	   downloading into certain real time kernels  with  the  COFF	object
	   file	 format;  since	 COFF cannot represent more than 65535 reloca-
	   tions in a single section.  Note that this will fail	to  work  with
	   object  file	 formats which do not support arbitrary	sections.  The
	   linker will not split up individual input sections for  redistribu-
	   tion, so if a single	input section contains more than count reloca-
	   tions one output section will contain that many relocations.	 count
	   defaults to a value of 32768.

       --stats
	   Compute  and	 display statistics about the operation	of the linker,
	   such	as execution time and memory usage.

       --traditional-format
	   For some targets, the output	of ld is different in some  ways  from
	   the output of some existing linker.	This switch requests ld	to use
	   the traditional format instead.

	   For	example, on SunOS, ld combines duplicate entries in the	symbol
	   string table.  This can reduce the size of an output	file with full
	   debugging information by over 30 percent.  Unfortunately, the SunOS
	   "dbx" program can not read the  resulting  program  ("gdb"  has  no
	   trouble).   The --traditional-format	switch tells ld	to not combine
	   duplicate entries.

       --section-start sectionname=org
	   Locate a section in the output file at the absolute	address	 given
	   by  org.  You may use this option as	many times as necessary	to lo-
	   cate	multiple sections in the command line.	org must be  a	single
	   hexadecimal	integer; for compatibility with	other linkers, you may
	   omit	the leading 0x usually	associated  with  hexadecimal  values.
	   Note:  there	 should	 be  no	 white	space between sectionname, the
	   equals sign (``=''),	and org.

       -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.	 org must be a
	   single hexadecimal integer; for compatibility with  other  linkers,
	   you	may  omit  the	leading	0x usually associated with hexadecimal
	   values.

       --dll-verbose
       --verbose
	   Display the version number for ld and list  the  linker  emulations
	   supported.	Display	 which	input  files can and cannot be opened.
	   Display the linker script being used	by the linker.

       --version-script=version-scriptfile
	   Specify the name of a version script	to the linker.	This is	 typi-
	   cally used when creating shared libraries to	specify	additional in-
	   formation  about  the  version heirarchy for	the library being cre-
	   ated.  This option is only meaningful on ELF	platforms  which  sup-
	   port	shared libraries.

       --warn-common
	   Warn	when a common symbol is	combined with another common symbol or
	   with	 a symbol definition.  Unix linkers allow this somewhat	sloppy
	   practice, but linkers on some other operating systems do not.  This
	   option allows you to	find potential problems	from combining	global
	   symbols.  Unfortunately, some C libraries use this practice,	so you
	   may	get some warnings about	symbols	in the libraries as well as in
	   your	programs.

	   There are three kinds of global symbols, illustrated	here by	C  ex-
	   amples:

	   int i = 1;
	       A definition, which goes	in the initialized data	section	of the
	       output file.

	   extern int i;
	       An  undefined  reference, which does not	allocate space.	 There
	       must be either a	definition or a	common symbol for the variable
	       somewhere.

	   int i;
	       A common	symbol.	 If there are only (one	or more)  common  sym-
	       bols  for a variable, it	goes in	the uninitialized data area of
	       the output file.	 The linker merges multiple common symbols for
	       the same	variable into a	single symbol.	If they	are of differ-
	       ent sizes, it picks the largest size.  The linker turns a  com-
	       mon  symbol into	a declaration, if there	is a definition	of the
	       same variable.

	   The --warn-common option can	produce	five kinds of warnings.	  Each
	   warning consists of a pair of lines:	the first describes the	symbol
	   just	 encountered, and the second describes the previous symbol en-
	   countered with the same name.  One or both of the two symbols  will
	   be a	common symbol.

	   1.  Turning	a common symbol	into a reference, because there	is al-
	       ready a definition for the symbol.

		       <file>(<section>): warning: common of `<symbol>'
			  overridden by	definition
		       <file>(<section>): warning: defined here

	   2.  Turning a common	symbol into a reference, because a later defi-
	       nition for the symbol is	encountered.  This is the same as  the
	       previous	 case,	except	that  the symbols are encountered in a
	       different order.

		       <file>(<section>): warning: definition of `<symbol>'
			  overriding common
		       <file>(<section>): warning: common is here

	   3.  Merging a common	symbol with a previous same-sized common  sym-
	       bol.

		       <file>(<section>): warning: multiple common
			  of `<symbol>'
		       <file>(<section>): warning: previous common is here

	   4.  Merging a common	symbol with a previous larger common symbol.

		       <file>(<section>): warning: common of `<symbol>'
			  overridden by	larger common
		       <file>(<section>): warning: larger common is here

	   5.  Merging	a common symbol	with a previous	smaller	common symbol.
	       This is the same	as the previous	case, except that the  symbols
	       are encountered in a different order.

		       <file>(<section>): warning: common of `<symbol>'
			  overriding smaller common
		       <file>(<section>): warning: smaller common is here

       --warn-constructors
	   Warn	 if any	global constructors are	used.  This is only useful for
	   a few object	file formats.  For  formats  like  COFF	 or  ELF,  the
	   linker can not detect the use of global constructors.

       --warn-multiple-gp
	   Warn	 if  multiple global pointer values are	required in the	output
	   file.  This is only meaningful for certain processors, such as  the
	   Alpha.  Specifically, some processors put large-valued constants in
	   a  special section.	A special register (the	global pointer)	points
	   into	the middle of this section, so that constants  can  be	loaded
	   efficiently	via  a	base-register relative addressing mode.	 Since
	   the offset in base-register relative	mode is	fixed  and  relatively
	   small (e.g.,	16 bits), this limits the maximum size of the constant
	   pool.  Thus,	in large programs, it is often necessary to use	multi-
	   ple global pointer values in	order to be able to address all	possi-
	   ble	constants.  This option	causes a warning to be issued whenever
	   this	case occurs.

       --warn-once
	   Only	warn once for each undefined symbol, rather than once per mod-
	   ule which refers to it.

       --warn-section-align
	   Warn	if the address of an output  section  is  changed  because  of
	   alignment.	Typically,  the	alignment will be set by an input sec-
	   tion.  The address will only	be changed if it not explicitly	speci-
	   fied; that is, if the "SECTIONS" command does not specify  a	 start
	   address for the section.

       --whole-archive
	   For	 each	archive	 mentioned  on	the  command  line  after  the
	   --whole-archive option, include every object	file in	the archive in
	   the link, rather than searching the archive for the required	object
	   files.  This	is normally used to turn an archive file into a	shared
	   library, forcing every object  to  be  included  in	the  resulting
	   shared library.  This option	may be used more than once.

	   Two	notes when using this option from gcc: First, gcc doesn't know
	   about this option, so you have to use -Wl,-whole-archive.   Second,
	   don't  forget  to  use  -Wl,-no-whole-archive  after	 your  list of
	   archives, because gcc will add its own list	of  archives  to  your
	   link	and you	may not	want this flag to affect those as well.

       --wrap symbol
	   Use a wrapper function for symbol.  Any undefined reference to sym-
	   bol	will  be resolved to "__wrap_symbol".  Any undefined reference
	   to "__real_symbol" will be resolved to symbol.

	   This	can be used to provide a wrapper for a system  function.   The
	   wrapper function should be called "__wrap_symbol".  If it wishes to
	   call	the system function, it	should call "__real_symbol".

	   Here	is a trivial example:

		   void	*
		   __wrap_malloc (int c)
		   {
		     printf ("malloc called with %ld\n", c);
		     return __real_malloc (c);
		   }

	   If you link other code with this file using --wrap malloc, then all
	   calls  to  "malloc" will call the function "__wrap_malloc" instead.
	   The call to "__real_malloc" in "__wrap_malloc" will call  the  real
	   "malloc" function.

	   You may wish	to provide a "__real_malloc" function as well, so that
	   links  without the --wrap option will succeed.  If you do this, you
	   should not put the definition of "__real_malloc" in the  same  file
	   as  "__wrap_malloc";	 if you	do, the	assembler may resolve the call
	   before the linker has a chance to wrap it to	"malloc".

       --enable-new-dtags
       --disable-new-dtags
	   This	linker can create the new dynamic tags in ELF. But  the	 older
	   ELF	 systems  may  not  understand	them.  If  you	specify	 --en-
	   able-new-dtags, the dynamic tags will be created as needed.	If you
	   specify --disable-new-dtags,	no new dynamic tags will  be  created.
	   By  default,	 the new dynamic tags are not created. Note that those
	   options are only available for ELF systems.

       The i386	PE linker supports the -shared option, which causes the	output
       to be a dynamically linked library  (DLL)  instead  of  a  normal  exe-
       cutable.	  You should name the output "*.dll" when you use this option.
       In addition, the	linker fully  supports	the  standard  "*.def"	files,
       which  may  be specified	on the linker command line like	an object file
       (in fact, it should precede archives it exports symbols from, to	ensure
       that they get linked in,	just like a normal object file).

       In addition to the options common to all	targets, the  i386  PE	linker
       support	additional  command line options that are specific to the i386
       PE target.  Options that	take values may	be separated from their	values
       by either a space or an equals sign.

       --add-stdcall-alias
	   If given, symbols with a stdcall suffix (@nn) will be exported  as-
	   is and also with the	suffix stripped.

       --base-file file
	   Use	file as	the name of a file in which to save the	base addresses
	   of all the relocations needed for generating	DLLs with dlltool.

       --dll
	   Create a DLL	instead	of a regular executable.   You	may  also  use
	   -shared or specify a	"LIBRARY" in a given ".def" file.

       --enable-stdcall-fixup
       --disable-stdcall-fixup
	   If  the link	finds a	symbol that it cannot resolve, it will attempt
	   to do "fuzzy	linking" by looking for	another	 defined  symbol  that
	   differs  only  in  the format of the	symbol name (cdecl vs stdcall)
	   and will resolve that symbol	by linking to the match.  For example,
	   the undefined  symbol  "_foo"  might	 be  linked  to	 the  function
	   "_foo@12", or the undefined symbol "_bar@16"	might be linked	to the
	   function  "_bar".   When the	linker does this, it prints a warning,
	   since it normally should have failed	to link, but sometimes	import
	   libraries  generated	from third-party dlls may need this feature to
	   be usable.  If you specify --enable-stdcall-fixup, this feature  is
	   fully  enabled and warnings are not printed.	 If you	specify	--dis-
	   able-stdcall-fixup, this feature is disabled	 and  such  mismatches
	   are considered to be	errors.

       --export-all-symbols
	   If  given,  all  global  symbols in the objects used	to build a DLL
	   will	be exported by the DLL.	 Note that  this  is  the  default  if
	   there otherwise wouldn't be any exported symbols.  When symbols are
	   explicitly  exported	via DEF	files or implicitly exported via func-
	   tion	attributes, the	default	is to not export anything else	unless
	   this	 option	is given.  Note	that the symbols "DllMain@12", "DllEn-
	   tryPoint@0",	"DllMainCRTStartup@12",	and "impure_ptr" will  not  be
	   automatically  exported.   Also,  symbols  imported from other DLLs
	   will	not be re-exported, nor	will symbols specifying	the DLL's  in-
	   ternal  layout such as those	beginning with "_head_"	or ending with
	   "_iname".  In addition, no symbols from "libgcc", "libstd++", "lib-
	   mingw32", or	"crtX.o" will be exported.  Symbols whose names	 begin
	   with	 "__rtti_"  or "__builtin_" will not be	exported, to help with
	   C++ DLLs.  Finally, there is	an extensive  list  of	cygwin-private
	   symbols  that  are  not  exported  (obviously, this applies on when
	   building DLLs for  cygwin  targets).	  These	 cygwin-excludes  are:
	   "_cygwin_dll_entry@12",  "_cygwin_crt0_common@8",  "_cygwin_noncyg-
	   win_dll_entry@12",  "_fmode",  "_impure_ptr",  "cygwin_attach_dll",
	   "cygwin_premain0",	"cygwin_premain1",   "cygwin_premain2",	 "cyg-
	   win_premain3", and "environ".

       --exclude-symbols symbol,symbol,...
	   Specifies a list of symbols which should not	be  automatically  ex-
	   ported.  The	symbol names may be delimited by commas	or colons.

       --exclude-libs lib,lib,...
	   Specifies a list of archive libraries from which symbols should not
	   be  automatically  exported.	 The library names may be delimited by
	   commas or colons.  Specifying "--exclude-libs ALL" excludes symbols
	   in all archive libraries from automatic export. Symbols  explicitly
	   listed  in  a  .def file are	still exported,	regardless of this op-
	   tion.

       --file-alignment
	   Specify the file alignment.	Sections in the	file will always begin
	   at file offsets which are multiples of this number.	This  defaults
	   to 512.

       --heap reserve
       --heap reserve,commit
	   Specify  the	amount of memory to reserve (and optionally commit) to
	   be used as heap for this program.  The default is 1Mb reserved,  4K
	   committed.

       --image-base value
	   Use	value as the base address of your program or dll.  This	is the
	   lowest memory location that will be used when your program  or  dll
	   is  loaded.	To reduce the need to relocate and improve performance
	   of your dlls, each should have a unique base	address	and not	 over-
	   lap	any  other dlls.  The default is 0x400000 for executables, and
	   0x10000000 for dlls.

       --kill-at
	   If given, the stdcall suffixes (@nn)	will be	stripped from  symbols
	   before they are exported.

       --major-image-version value
	   Sets	the major number of the	"image version".  Defaults to 1.

       --major-os-version value
	   Sets	the major number of the	"os version".  Defaults	to 4.

       --major-subsystem-version value
	   Sets	the major number of the	"subsystem version".  Defaults to 4.

       --minor-image-version value
	   Sets	the minor number of the	"image version".  Defaults to 0.

       --minor-os-version value
	   Sets	the minor number of the	"os version".  Defaults	to 0.

       --minor-subsystem-version value
	   Sets	the minor number of the	"subsystem version".  Defaults to 0.

       --output-def file
	   The	linker will create the file file which will contain a DEF file
	   corresponding to the	DLL the	linker is generating.  This  DEF  file
	   (which  should  be  called "*.def") may be used to create an	import
	   library with	"dlltool" or may be used as a reference	 to  automati-
	   cally or implicitly exported	symbols.

       --out-implib file
	   The	linker	will create the	file file which	will contain an	import
	   lib corresponding to	the DLL	the linker is generating. This	import
	   lib	(which should be called	"*.dll.a" or "*.a" may be used to link
	   clients against the generated DLL; this behavior makes it  possible
	   to skip a separate "dlltool"	import library creation	step.

       --enable-auto-image-base
	   Automatically  choose the image base	for DLLs, unless one is	speci-
	   fied	using the "--image-base" argument.  By using a hash  generated
	   from	the dllname to create unique image bases for each DLL, in-mem-
	   ory	collisions  and	 relocations which can delay program execution
	   are avoided.

       --disable-auto-image-base
	   Do not automatically	generate a unique image	base.  If there	is  no
	   user-specified  image  base	("--image-base") then use the platform
	   default.

       --dll-search-prefix string
	   When	linking	dynamically to a dll  without  an  import  library,  i
	   search  for	"<string><basename>.dll"  in  preference to "lib<base-
	   name>.dll". This behavior  allows  easy  distinction	 between  DLLs
	   built  for  the  various  "subplatforms": native, cygwin, uwin, pw,
	   etc.	 For instance, cygwin DLLs  typically  use  "--dll-search-pre-
	   fix=cyg".

       --enable-auto-import
	   Do  sophisticated  linking of "_symbol" to "__imp__symbol" for DATA
	   imports from	DLLs, and create the necessary thunking	 symbols  when
	   building  the  DLLs	with  those DATA exports.  This	generally will
	   'just work' -- but sometimes	you may	see this message:

	   "variable '<var>' can't be auto-imported. Please read the  documen-
	   tation for ld's "--enable-auto-import" for details."

	   This	 message  occurs when some (sub)expression accesses an address
	   ultimately given by the sum of two constants	(Win32	import	tables
	   only	 allow	one).  Instances where this may	occur include accesses
	   to member fields of struct variables	imported from a	DLL,  as  well
	   as  using  a	 constant index	into an	array variable imported	from a
	   DLL.	 Any multiword variable	(arrays, structs, long long, etc)  may
	   trigger  this  error	 condition.   However, regardless of the exact
	   data	type of	the offending exported variable, ld will always	detect
	   it, issue the warning, and exit.

	   There are several ways to address this  difficulty,	regardless  of
	   the data type of the	exported variable:

	   One solution	is to force one	of the 'constants' to be a variable --
	   that	 is,  unknown and un-optimizable at compile time.  For arrays,
	   there are two possibilities:	a) make	the indexee (the  array's  ad-
	   dress)  a  variable,	 or  b)	 make the 'constant' index a variable.
	   Thus:

		   extern type extern_array[];
		   extern_array[1] -->
		      {	volatile type *t=extern_array; t[1] }

	   or

		   extern type extern_array[];
		   extern_array[1] -->
		      {	volatile int t=1; extern_array[t] }

	   For structs (and most other multiword data types) the  only	option
	   is  to  make	the struct itself (or the long long, or	the ...) vari-
	   able:

		   extern struct s extern_struct;
		   extern_struct.field -->
		      {	volatile struct	s *t=&extern_struct; t->field }

	   or

		   extern long long extern_ll;
		   extern_ll -->
		     { volatile	long long * local_ll=&extern_ll; *local_ll }

	   A second method of dealing  with  this  difficulty  is  to  abandon
	   'auto-import'  for  the  offending  symbol  and mark	it with	"__de-
	   clspec(dllimport)".	However, in practice that requires using  com-
	   pile-time  #defines	to  indicate  whether  you are building	a DLL,
	   building client code	that will link to the DLL,  or	merely	build-
	   ing/linking to a static library.   In making	the choice between the
	   various methods of resolving	the 'direct address with constant off-
	   set'	problem, you should consider typical real-world	usage:

	   Original:

		   --foo.h
		   extern int arr[];
		   --foo.c
		   #include "foo.h"
		   void	main(int argc, char **argv){
		     printf("%d\n",arr[1]);
		   }

	   Solution 1:

		   --foo.h
		   extern int arr[];
		   --foo.c
		   #include "foo.h"
		   void	main(int argc, char **argv){
		     /*	This workaround	is for win32 and cygwin; do not	"optimize" */
		     volatile int *parr	= arr;
		     printf("%d\n",parr[1]);
		   }

	   Solution 2:

		   --foo.h
		   /* Note: auto-export	is assumed (no __declspec(dllexport)) */
		   #if (defined(_WIN32)	|| defined(__CYGWIN__))	&& \
		     !(defined(FOO_BUILD_DLL) || defined(FOO_STATIC))
		   #define FOO_IMPORT __declspec(dllimport)
		   #else
		   #define FOO_IMPORT
		   #endif
		   extern FOO_IMPORT int arr[];
		   --foo.c
		   #include "foo.h"
		   void	main(int argc, char **argv){
		     printf("%d\n",arr[1]);
		   }

	   A third way to avoid	this problem is	to re-code your	library	to use
	   a functional	interface rather than a	data interface for the offend-
	   ing variables (e.g. set_foo() and get_foo() accessor	functions).

       --disable-auto-import
	   Do  not  attempt  to	 do  sophisticalted  linking  of  "_symbol" to
	   "__imp__symbol" for DATA imports from DLLs.

       --enable-extra-pe-debug
	   Show	additional debug info related to auto-import symbol thunking.

       --section-alignment
	   Sets	the section alignment.	Sections in memory will	 always	 begin
	   at  addresses  which	 are  a	 multiple of this number.  Defaults to
	   0x1000.

       --stack reserve
       --stack reserve,commit
	   Specify the amount of memory	to reserve (and	optionally commit)  to
	   be used as stack for	this program.  The default is 2Mb reserved, 4K
	   committed.

       --subsystem which
       --subsystem which:major
       --subsystem which:major.minor
	   Specifies the subsystem under which your program will execute.  The
	   legal  values  for  which  are  "native", "windows",	"console", and
	   "posix".  You may optionally	set the	subsystem version also.

ENVIRONMENT
       You can change the behavior of ld with the environment variables	 "GNU-
       TARGET",	"LDEMULATION", and "COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE".

       "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 target. If "GNUTARGET" is	 set  to  "de-
       fault"  then BFD	attempts to discover the input format by examining bi-
       nary input files; this method often succeeds, but there	are  potential
       ambiguities, since there	is no method of	ensuring that the magic	number
       used to specify object-file formats is unique.  However,	the configura-
       tion  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"  determines the default emulation if you don't use	the -m
       option.	The emulation can affect various aspects of linker  behaviour,
       particularly the	default	linker script.	You can	list the available em-
       ulations	 with  the  --verbose  or -V options.  If the -m option	is not
       used, and the "LDEMULATION" environment variable	is  not	 defined,  the
       default emulation depends upon how the linker was configured.

       Normally,  the  linker will default to demangling symbols.  However, if
       "COLLECT_NO_DEMANGLE" is	set in the environment,	then it	 will  default
       to not demangling symbols.  This	environment variable is	used in	a sim-
       ilar  fashion  by the "gcc" linker wrapper program.  The	default	may be
       overridden by the --demangle and	--no-demangle options.

SEE ALSO
       ar(1), nm(1), objcopy(1), objdump(1), readelf(1)	and the	 Info  entries
       for binutils and	ld.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright  (c)  1991,  92,  93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 2000, 2001 Free
       Software	Foundation, Inc.

       Permission is granted to	copy, distribute and/or	modify	this  document
       under  the  terms of the	GNU Free Documentation License,	Version	1.1 or
       any later version published by the Free Software	 Foundation;  with  no
       Invariant  Sections,  with no Front-Cover Texts,	and with no Back-Cover
       Texts.  A copy of the license is	included in the	section	entitled  "GNU
       Free Documentation License".

binutils-2.13			  2002-10-30				 LD(1)

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