Add the -just-symbol-name (aka -j) flag to llvm-nm to just print the
symbol’s name. On darwin the -j flag is used (often in combinations
with other flags) to produce a complete list of symbol names which
than can then be reorder and used with ld(1)’s -order_file.
llvm-svn: 212294
diff --git a/llvm/test/Object/nm-trivial-object.test b/llvm/test/Object/nm-trivial-object.test
index 09642e1..656d6b0 100644
--- a/llvm/test/Object/nm-trivial-object.test
+++ b/llvm/test/Object/nm-trivial-object.test
@@ -18,6 +18,8 @@
RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix macho64
RUN: llvm-nm %p/Inputs/macho-text-data-bss.macho-x86_64 \
RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix macho-tdb
+RUN: llvm-nm -j %p/Inputs/macho-text-data-bss.macho-x86_64 \
+RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix macho-j
RUN: llvm-nm -r %p/Inputs/macho-text-data-bss.macho-x86_64 \
RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix macho-r
RUN: llvm-nm %p/Inputs/common.coff-i386 \
@@ -85,6 +87,12 @@
macho-tdb: 0000000000000000 T _t
macho-tdb: 0000000000000048 S _t.eh
+macho-j: EH_frame0
+macho-j: _b
+macho-j: _d
+macho-j: _t
+macho-j: _t.eh
+
macho-r: 0000000000000048 S _t.eh
macho-r-NEXT: 0000000000000000 T _t
macho-r-NEXT: 000000000000000c D _d