On Tue, Jul 14, 2020 at 2:16 PM Paul Menzel <pmenzel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Dear Sami, > > > Am 13.07.20 um 01:34 schrieb Sami Tolvanen: > > On Sat, Jul 11, 2020 at 9:32 AM Paul Menzel <pmenzel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Thank you very much for sending these changes. > >> > >> Do you have a branch, where your current work can be pulled from? Your > >> branch on GitHub [1] seems 15 months old. > > > > The clang-lto branch is rebased regularly on top of Linus' tree. > > GitHub just looks at the commit date of the last commit in the tree, > > which isn't all that informative. > > Thank you for clearing this up, and sorry for not checking myself. > > >> Out of curiosity, I applied the changes, allowed the selection for i386 > >> (x86), and with Clang 1:11~++20200701093119+ffee8040534-1~exp1 from > >> Debian experimental, it failed with `Invalid absolute R_386_32 > >> relocation: KERNEL_PAGES`: > > > > I haven't looked at getting this to work on i386, which is why we only > > select ARCH_SUPPORTS_LTO for x86_64. I would expect there to be a few > > issues to address. > > > >>> arch/x86/tools/relocs vmlinux > arch/x86/boot/compressed/vmlinux.relocs;arch/x86/tools/relocs --abs-relocs vmlinux > >>> Invalid absolute R_386_32 relocation: KERNEL_PAGES > > > > KERNEL_PAGES looks like a constant, so it's probably safe to ignore > > the absolute relocation in tools/relocs.c. > > Thank you for pointing me to the right direction. I am happy to report, > that with the diff below (no idea to what list to add the string), Linux > 5.8-rc5 with the LLVM/Clang/LTO patches on top, builds and boots on the > ASRock E350M1. > > ``` > diff --git a/arch/x86/tools/relocs.c b/arch/x86/tools/relocs.c > index 8f3bf34840cef..e91af127ed3c0 100644 > --- a/arch/x86/tools/relocs.c > +++ b/arch/x86/tools/relocs.c > @@ -79,6 +79,7 @@ static const char * const > sym_regex_kernel[S_NSYMTYPES] = { > "__end_rodata_hpage_align|" > #endif > "__vvar_page|" > + "KERNEL_PAGES|" > "_end)$" > }; > ``` > What llvm-toolchain and version did you use? Can you post your linux-config? Thanks. - Sedat -