#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use warnings; # Sort the symbol table portion of the output of objdump -ht by # section, then by symbol value, then by size. Used to enhance the # linker maps produced by "make bin/%.map" by also showing the values # of all non-global symbols. my %section_idx = ( "*ABS*" => ".", "*UND*" => "_" ); my %lines; while ( <> ) { if ( /^\s+(\d+)\s+([\.\*]\S+)\s+[0-9a-fA-F]+\s+[0-9a-fA-F]/ ) { # It's a header line containing a section definition; extract the # section index and store it. Also print the header line. print; ( my $index, my $section ) = ( $1, $2 ); $section_idx{$section} = sprintf ( "%02d", $index ); } elsif ( /^([0-9a-fA-F]+)\s.*?\s([\.\*]\S+)\s+([0-9a-fA-F]+)\s+(\S+)/ ) { # It's a symbol line - store it in the hash, indexed by # ":::". is "0" if # the symbol name is of the form xxx_end, "1" otherwise; this is # done so that table end markers show up before any other symbols # with the same value. ( my $value, my $section, my $size, my $name ) = ( $1, $2, $3, $4 ); die "Unrecognised section \"$section\"\n" unless exists $section_idx{$section}; my $section_idx = $section_idx{$section}; my $end = ( $name =~ /_end$/ ) ? "0" : "1"; my $key = $section_idx.":".$value.":".$size.":".$end; $lines{$key} ||= ''; $lines{$key} .= $_; } else { # It's a generic header line: just print it. print; } } print $lines{$_} foreach sort keys %lines;