//===--- magic-symbols-for-install-name.c - Magic linker directive symbols ===// // // This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project // // Copyright (c) 2014 - 2024 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors // Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception // // See https://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information // See https://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // // A file containing magic symbols that instruct the linker to use a // different install name when targeting older OSes. This file gets // compiled into all of the libraries that are embedded for backward // deployment. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #if defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__) && SWIFT_STDLIB_SUPPORT_BACK_DEPLOYMENT #include #include #include "swift/shims/Visibility.h" // Swift was supported as an embedded library in macOS (née OS X) 10.9, iOS 7.0, watchOS 2.0, tvOS 9.0. // It became part of the OS in macOS 10.14.4, iOS 12.2, watchOS 5.2, tvOS 12.2. Projects can continue // to embed Swift, but the linker will see the OS version and try to link on that by default. In order // to support back deployment, add a magic symbol to the OS library so that back deployment will link // on the embedded library instead. When running on a newer OS, the OS version of the library will be // used due to Xcode inserting a runpath search path of /usr/lib/swift based on the deployment target // being less than SupportedTargets[target][SwiftOSRuntimeMinimumDeploymentTarget] in SDKSettings.plist. // The linker uses a specially formatted symbol to do the back deployment: // $ld$previous$$$$$$$ // compatibility-version and symbol-name are left off to apply to all library versions and symbols. // This symbol isn't a legal C identifier, so it needs to be specified with __asm. #define RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE_IMPL(name, platform, startVersion, endVersion) \ SWIFT_RUNTIME_EXPORT const char ld_previous_ ## platform \ __asm("$ld$previous$@rpath/lib" __STRING(name) ".dylib$$" __STRING(platform) "$" __STRING(startVersion) "$" __STRING(endVersion) "$$"); \ const char ld_previous_ ## platform = 0; // Using the __STRING macro is important so that name and platform get expanded before being // stringified. The versions could just be #version, __STRING is only used for consistency. #define RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(platform, startVersion, endVersion) \ RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE_IMPL(SWIFT_TARGET_LIBRARY_NAME, platform, startVersion, endVersion) #if TARGET_OS_OSX || TARGET_OS_MACCATALYST RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_MACOS, 10.9, 10.14.4) #elif TARGET_OS_IOS && !TARGET_OS_VISION #if TARGET_OS_SIMULATOR RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_IOSSIMULATOR, 7.0, 12.2) #else RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_IOS, 7.0, 12.2) #endif #elif TARGET_OS_WATCH #if TARGET_OS_SIMULATOR RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_WATCHOSSIMULATOR, 2.0, 5.2) #else RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_WATCHOS, 2.0, 5.2) #endif #elif TARGET_OS_TV #if TARGET_OS_SIMULATOR RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_TVOSSIMULATOR, 9.0, 12.2) #else RPATH_PREVIOUS_DIRECTIVE(PLATFORM_TVOS, 9.0, 12.2) #endif #endif // Swift wasn't supported as an embedded library in any other OS, so no need to create back deployment // symbols for any of the other ones. #endif // defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__) && SWIFT_STDLIB_SUPPORT_BACK_DEPLOYMENT