gold (linker)

In software engineering, gold is a linker for ELF files. It became an official GNU package and was added to binutils in March 2008[1] [2] and first released in binutils version 2.19. gold was developed by Ian Lance Taylor and a small team at Google.[3] The motivation for writing gold was to make a linker that is faster than the GNU linker,[3] especially for large applications coded in C++.

gold
Developer(s)Ian Lance Taylor
Written inC++
Operating systemGNU
Platformx86, x86-64, ARM, PowerPC, TileGX
TypeLinker
LicenseGNU General Public License version 3
Websitesourceware.org/binutils/

Unlike the GNU linker, gold doesn't use the BFD library to process object files. While this limits the object file formats it can process to ELF only, it is also claimed to result in a cleaner and faster implementation without an additional abstraction layer. The author cited complete removal of BFD as a reason to create a new linker from scratch rather than incrementally improve the GNU linker.[4] This rewrite also fixes some bugs in old ld that break ELF files in various minor ways.[5]

To specify gold in a makefile, one sets the LD or LD environmental variable to ld.gold. To specify gold through a compiler option, one can use the gcc option -fuse-ld=gold.

Fedora has moved gold from binutils into its own package due to concerns it is suffering from bitrot after Google's interest has moved to LLVM.[6]

See also

References

  1. "gold README: Rewrite, with some notes on unsupported features". 2008-03-25. Retrieved 2020-04-28. It is a GNU program, and therefore follows the GNU formatting standards[...]
  2. Ian Lance Taylor (2008-03-22). "New ELF linker code added to GNU binutils". binutils mailing list. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
  3. Ian Lance Taylor (2008-04-04). "gold: Google Releases New and Improved GCC Linker". Google Open Source Blog. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
  4. Ian Lance Taylor (2008). A New ELF Linker. GCC Developers' Summit. pp. 129–136. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
  5. "ElflintGNU". sourceware.org. Retrieved 2020-04-28. eu-elflint has a flag '--gnu-ld' described as "Binary has been created with GNU ld and is therefore known to be broken in certain ways". Note that by GNU ld the original GNU binutils ld is meant, not the newer GNU binutils gold linker.
  6. Michael Larabel (2019-02-24). "GNU's Gold Linker Is Stagnating, Fedora Looking To Punt It Off Into A Separate Package". Phoronix. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.