Command Section

LLVM-OBJCOPY(1)                      LLVM                      LLVM-OBJCOPY(1)

NAME
       llvm-objcopy - object copying and editing tool

SYNOPSIS
       llvm-objcopy [options] input [output]

DESCRIPTION
       llvm-objcopy is a tool to copy and manipulate objects. In basic usage,
       it makes a semantic copy of the input to the output. If any options are
       specified, the output may be modified along the way, e.g. by removing
       sections.

       If no output file is specified, the input file is modified in-place. If
       "-" is specified for the input file, the input is read from the
       program's standard input stream. If "-" is specified for the output
       file, the output is written to the standard output stream of the
       program.

       If the input is an archive, any requested operations will be applied to
       each archive member individually.

       The tool is still in active development, but in most scenarios it works
       as a drop-in replacement for GNU's objcopy.

GENERIC AND CROSS-PLATFORM OPTIONS
       The following options are either agnostic of the file format, or apply
       to multiple file formats.

       --add-gnu-debuglink <debug-file>
              Add a .gnu_debuglink section for <debug-file> to the output.

       --add-section <section=file>
              Add a section named <section> with the contents of <file> to the
              output. For ELF objects the section will be of type SHT_NOTE, if
              the name starts with ".note". Otherwise, it will have type
              SHT_PROGBITS. Can be specified multiple times to add multiple
              sections.

              For MachO objects, <section> must be formatted as <segment
              name>,<section name>.

       --binary-architecture <arch>, -B
              Ignored for compatibility.

       --disable-deterministic-archives, -U
              Use real values for UIDs, GIDs and timestamps when updating
              archive member headers.

       --discard-all, -x
              Remove most local symbols from the output. Different file
              formats may limit this to a subset of the local symbols. For
              example, file and section symbols in ELF objects will not be
              discarded.

       --dump-section <section>=<file>
              Dump the contents of section <section> into the file <file>. Can
              be specified multiple times to dump multiple sections to
              different files.  <file> is unrelated to the input and output
              files provided to llvm-objcopy and as such the normal copying
              and editing operations will still be performed. No operations
              are performed on the sections prior to dumping them.

              For MachO objects, <section> must be formatted as <segment
              name>,<section name>.

       --enable-deterministic-archives, -D
              Enable deterministic mode when copying archives, i.e. use 0 for
              archive member header UIDs, GIDs and timestamp fields. On by
              default.

       --help, -h
              Print a summary of command line options.

       --only-keep-debug
              Produce a debug file as the output that only preserves contents
              of sections useful for debugging purposes.

              For ELF objects, this removes the contents of SHF_ALLOC sections
              that are not SHT_NOTE by making them SHT_NOBITS and shrinking
              the program headers where possible.

       --only-section <section>, -j
              Remove all sections from the output, except for sections named
              <section>.  Can be specified multiple times to keep multiple
              sections.

              For MachO objects, <section> must be formatted as <segment
              name>,<section name>.

       --redefine-sym <old>=<new>
              Rename symbols called <old> to <new> in the output. Can be
              specified multiple times to rename multiple symbols.

       --redefine-syms <filename>
              Rename symbols in the output as described in the file
              <filename>. In the file, each line represents a single symbol to
              rename, with the old name and new name separated by whitespace.
              Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored, as is anything
              following a '#'. Can be specified multiple times to read names
              from multiple files.

       --regex
              If specified, symbol and section names specified by other
              switches are treated as extended POSIX regular expression
              patterns.

       --remove-section <section>, -R
              Remove the specified section from the output. Can be specified
              multiple times to remove multiple sections simultaneously.

              For MachO objects, <section> must be formatted as <segment
              name>,<section name>.

       --set-section-alignment <section>=<align>
              Set the alignment of section <section> to <align>`. Can be
              specified multiple times to update multiple sections.

       --set-section-flags <section>=<flag>[,<flag>,...]
              Set section properties in the output of section <section> based
              on the specified <flag> values. Can be specified multiple times
              to update multiple sections.

              Supported flag names are alloc, load, noload, readonly, exclude,
              debug, code, data, rom, share, contents, merge and strings. Not
              all flags are meaningful for all object file formats.

              For ELF objects, the flags have the following effects:

              alloc = add the SHF_ALLOC flag.

              load = if the section has SHT_NOBITS type, mark it as a
                SHT_PROGBITS section.

              readonly = if this flag is not specified, add the SHF_WRITE
                flag.

              exclude = add the SHF_EXCLUDE flag.

              code = add the SHF_EXECINSTR flag.

              merge = add the SHF_MERGE flag.

              strings = add the SHF_STRINGS flag.

              contents = if the section has SHT_NOBITS type, mark it as a
                SHT_PROGBITS section.

              For COFF objects, the flags have the following effects:

              alloc = add the IMAGE_SCN_CNT_UNINITIALIZED_DATA and
                IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ flags, unless the load flag is specified.

              noload = add the IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE and IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ
                flags.

              readonly = if this flag is not specified, add the
                IMAGE_SCN_MEM_WRITE flag.

              exclude = add the IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE and IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ
                flags.

              debug = add the IMAGE_SCN_CNT_INITIALIZED_DATA,
                IMAGE_SCN_MEM_DISCARDABLE and  IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ flags.

              code = add the IMAGE_SCN_CNT_CODE, IMAGE_SCN_MEM_EXECUTE and
                IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ flags.

              data = add the IMAGE_SCN_CNT_INITIALIZED_DATA and
                IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ flags.

              share = add the IMAGE_SCN_MEM_SHARED and IMAGE_SCN_MEM_READ
                flags.

       --strip-all-gnu
              Remove all symbols, debug sections and relocations from the
              output. This option is equivalent to GNU objcopy's --strip-all
              switch.

       --strip-all, -S
              For ELF objects, remove from the output all symbols and
              non-alloc sections not within segments, except for .gnu.warning,
              .ARM.attribute sections and the section name table.

              For COFF and Mach-O objects, remove all symbols, debug sections,
              and relocations from the output.

       --strip-debug, -g
              Remove all debug sections from the output.

       --strip-symbol <symbol>, -N
              Remove all symbols named <symbol> from the output. Can be
              specified multiple times to remove multiple symbols.

       --strip-symbols <filename>
              Remove all symbols whose names appear in the file <filename>,
              from the output. In the file, each line represents a single
              symbol name, with leading and trailing whitespace ignored, as is
              anything following a '#'. Can be specified multiple times to
              read names from multiple files.

       --strip-unneeded-symbol <symbol>
              Remove from the output all symbols named <symbol> that are local
              or undefined and are not required by any relocation.

       --strip-unneeded-symbols <filename>
              Remove all symbols whose names appear in the file <filename>,
              from the output, if they are local or undefined and are not
              required by any relocation.  In the file, each line represents a
              single symbol name, with leading and trailing whitespace
              ignored, as is anything following a '#'. Can be specified
              multiple times to read names from multiple files.

       --strip-unneeded
              Remove from the output all local or undefined symbols that are
              not required by relocations. Also remove all debug sections.

       --version, -V
              Display the version of the llvm-objcopy executable.

       --wildcard, -w
              Allow wildcard syntax for symbol-related flags. On by default
              for section-related flags. Incompatible with --regex.

              Wildcard syntax allows the following special symbols:

                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |Character      | Meaning           | Equivalent |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |*              | Any number of     | .*         |
                     |               | characters        |            |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |?              | Any single        | .          |
                     |               | character         |            |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |\              | Escape the next   | \          |
                     |               | character         |            |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |[a-z]          | Character class   | [a-z]      |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+
                     |[!a-z], [^a-z] | Negated character | [^a-z]     |
                     |               | class             |            |
                     +---------------+-------------------+------------+

              Additionally, starting a wildcard with '!' will prevent a match,
              even if another flag matches. For example -w -N '*' -N '!x' will
              strip all symbols except for x.

              The order of wildcards does not matter. For example, -w -N '*'
              -N '!x' is the same as -w -N '!x' -N '*'.

       @<FILE>
              Read command-line options and commands from response file
              <FILE>.

ELF-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       The following options are implemented only for ELF objects. If used
       with other objects, llvm-objcopy will either emit an error or silently
       ignore them.

       --add-symbol <name>=[<section>:]<value>[,<flags>]
              Add a new symbol called <name> to the output symbol table, in
              the section named <section>, with value <value>. If <section> is
              not specified, the symbol is added as an absolute symbol. The
              <flags> affect the symbol properties. Accepted values are:

              global = the symbol will have global binding.

              local = the symbol will have local binding.

              weak = the symbol will have weak binding.

              default = the symbol will have default visibility.

              hidden = the symbol will have hidden visibility.

              protected = the symbol will have protected visibility.

              file = the symbol will be an STT_FILE symbol.

              section = the symbol will be an STT_SECTION symbol.

              object = the symbol will be an STT_OBJECT symbol.

              function = the symbol will be an STT_FUNC symbol.

              indirect-function = the symbol will be an STT_GNU_IFUNC
                symbol.

              Additionally, the following flags are accepted but ignored:
              debug, constructor, warning, indirect, synthetic, unique-object,
              before.

              Can be specified multiple times to add multiple symbols.

       --allow-broken-links
              Allow llvm-objcopy to remove sections even if it would leave
              invalid section references. Any invalid sh_link fields will be
              set to zero.

       --build-id-link-dir <dir>
              Set the directory used by --build-id-link-input and
              --build-id-link-output.

       --build-id-link-input <suffix>
              Hard-link the input to <dir>/xx/xxx<suffix>, where <dir> is the
              directory specified by --build-id-link-dir. The path used is
              derived from the hex build ID.

       --build-id-link-output <suffix>
              Hard-link the output to <dir>/xx/xxx<suffix>, where <dir> is the
              directory specified by --build-id-link-dir. The path used is
              derived from the hex build ID.

       --change-start <incr>, --adjust-start
              Add <incr> to the program's start address. Can be specified
              multiple times, in which case the values will be applied
              cumulatively.

       --compress-debug-sections [<style>]
              Compress DWARF debug sections in the output, using the specified
              style.  Supported styles are zlib-gnu and zlib. Defaults to zlib
              if no style is specified.

       --decompress-debug-sections
              Decompress any compressed DWARF debug sections in the output.

       --discard-locals, -X
              Remove local symbols starting with ".L" from the output.

       --extract-dwo
              Remove all sections that are not DWARF .dwo sections from the
              output.

       --extract-main-partition
              Extract the main partition from the output.

       --extract-partition <name>
              Extract the named partition from the output.

       --globalize-symbol <symbol>
              Mark any defined symbols named <symbol> as global symbols in the
              output.  Can be specified multiple times to mark multiple
              symbols.

       --globalize-symbols <filename>
              Read a list of names from the file <filename> and mark defined
              symbols with those names as global in the output. In the file,
              each line represents a single symbol, with leading and trailing
              whitespace ignored, as is anything following a '#'. Can be
              specified multiple times to read names from multiple files.

       --input-target <format>, -I
              Read the input as the specified format. See SUPPORTED FORMATS
              for a list of valid <format> values. If unspecified,
              llvm-objcopy will attempt to determine the format automatically.

       --keep-file-symbols
              Keep symbols of type STT_FILE, even if they would otherwise be
              stripped.

       --keep-global-symbol <symbol>
              Make all symbols local in the output, except for symbols with
              the name <symbol>. Can be specified multiple times to ignore
              multiple symbols.

       --keep-global-symbols <filename>
              Make all symbols local in the output, except for symbols named
              in the file <filename>. In the file, each line represents a
              single symbol, with leading and trailing whitespace ignored, as
              is anything following a '#'. Can be specified multiple times to
              read names from multiple files.

       --keep-section <section>
              When removing sections from the output, do not remove sections
              named <section>. Can be specified multiple times to keep
              multiple sections.

       --keep-symbol <symbol>, -K
              When removing symbols from the output, do not remove symbols
              named <symbol>. Can be specified multiple times to keep multiple
              symbols.

       --keep-symbols <filename>
              When removing symbols from the output do not remove symbols
              named in the file <filename>. In the file, each line represents
              a single symbol, with leading and trailing whitespace ignored,
              as is anything following a '#'. Can be specified multiple times
              to read names from multiple files.

       --localize-hidden
              Make all symbols with hidden or internal visibility local in the
              output.

       --localize-symbol <symbol>, -L
              Mark any defined non-common symbol named <symbol> as a local
              symbol in the output. Can be specified multiple times to mark
              multiple symbols as local.

       --localize-symbols <filename>
              Read a list of names from the file <filename> and mark defined
              non-common symbols with those names as local in the output. In
              the file, each line represents a single symbol, with leading and
              trailing whitespace ignored, as is anything following a '#'. Can
              be specified multiple times to read names from multiple files.

       --new-symbol-visibility <visibility>
              Specify the visibility of the symbols automatically created when
              using binary input or --add-symbol. Valid options are:

              default

              hidden

              internal

              protected

              The default is default.

       --output-target <format>, -O
              Write the output as the specified format. See SUPPORTED FORMATS
              for a list of valid <format> values. If unspecified, the output
              format is assumed to be the same as the value specified for
              --input-target or the input file's format if that option is also
              unspecified.

       --prefix-alloc-sections <prefix>
              Add <prefix> to the front of the names of all allocatable
              sections in the output.

       --prefix-symbols <prefix>
              Add <prefix> to the front of every symbol name in the output.

       --preserve-dates, -p
              Preserve access and modification timestamps in the output.

       --rename-section <old>=<new>[,<flag>,...]
              Rename sections called <old> to <new> in the output, and apply
              any specified <flag> values. See --set-section-flags for a list
              of supported flags. Can be specified multiple times to rename
              multiple sections.

       --set-start-addr <addr>
              Set the start address of the output to <addr>. Overrides any
              previously specified --change-start or --adjust-start options.

       --split-dwo <dwo-file>
              Equivalent to running llvm-objcopy with --extract-dwo and
              <dwo-file> as the output file and no other options, and then
              with --strip-dwo on the input file.

       --strip-dwo
              Remove all DWARF .dwo sections from the output.

       --strip-non-alloc
              Remove from the output all non-allocatable sections that are not
              within segments.

       --strip-sections
              Remove from the output all section headers and all section data
              not within segments. Note that many tools will not be able to
              use an object without section headers.

       --target <format>, -F
              Equivalent to --input-target and --output-target for the
              specified format. See SUPPORTED FORMATS for a list of valid
              <format> values.

       --weaken-symbol <symbol>, -W
              Mark any global symbol named <symbol> as a weak symbol in the
              output. Can be specified multiple times to mark multiple symbols
              as weak.

       --weaken-symbols <filename>
              Read a list of names from the file <filename> and mark global
              symbols with those names as weak in the output. In the file,
              each line represents a single symbol, with leading and trailing
              whitespace ignored, as is anything following a '#'. Can be
              specified multiple times to read names from multiple files.

       --weaken
              Mark all defined global symbols as weak in the output.

SUPPORTED FORMATS
       The following values are currently supported by llvm-objcopy for the
       --input-target, --output-target, and --target options. For GNU objcopy
       compatibility, the values are all bfdnames.

       binary

       ihex

       elf32-i386

       elf32-x86-64

       elf64-x86-64

       elf32-iamcu

       elf32-littlearm

       elf64-aarch64

       elf64-littleaarch64

       elf32-littleriscv

       elf64-littleriscv

       elf32-powerpc

       elf32-powerpcle

       elf64-powerpc

       elf64-powerpcle

       elf32-bigmips

       elf32-ntradbigmips

       elf32-ntradlittlemips

       elf32-tradbigmips

       elf32-tradlittlemips

       elf64-tradbigmips

       elf64-tradlittlemips

       elf32-sparc

       elf32-sparcel

       Additionally, all targets except binary and ihex can have -freebsd as a
       suffix.

BINARY INPUT AND OUTPUT
       If binary is used as the value for --input-target, the input file will
       be embedded as a data section in an ELF relocatable object, with
       symbols _binary_<file_name>_start, _binary_<file_name>_end, and
       _binary_<file_name>_size representing the start, end and size of the
       data, where <file_name> is the path of the input file as specified on
       the command line with non-alphanumeric characters converted to _.

       If binary is used as the value for --output-target, the output file
       will be a raw binary file, containing the memory image of the input
       file.  Symbols and relocation information will be discarded. The image
       will start at the address of the first loadable section in the output.

EXIT STATUS
       llvm-objcopy exits with a non-zero exit code if there is an error.
       Otherwise, it exits with code 0.

BUGS
       To report bugs, please visit <https://bugs.llvm.org/>.

       There is a known issue with --input-target and --target causing only
       binary and ihex formats to have any effect. Other values will be
       ignored and llvm-objcopy will attempt to guess the input format.

SEE ALSO
       llvm-strip(1)

AUTHOR
       Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).

COPYRIGHT
       2003-2021, LLVM Project

12                                2021-06-07                   LLVM-OBJCOPY(1)

Command Section

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