Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.

Optional Section Attributes

Here is the full syntax of a section definition, including all the optional portions:

SECTIONS {
...
secname start BLOCK(align) (NOLOAD) : AT ( ldadr )
  { contents } >region =fill
...
}

secname and contents are required. See section Section Definitions, and see section Section Placement for details on contents. The remaining elements---start, BLOCK(align), (NOLOAD), AT ( ldadr ), >region, and =fill---are all optional.

start
You can force the output section to be loaded at a specified address by specifying start immediately following the section name. start can be represented as any expression. The following example generates section output at location 0x40000000:
SECTIONS {
  ...
  output 0x40000000: {
    ...
    }
  ...
}
BLOCK(align)
You can include BLOCK() specification to advance the location counter . prior to the beginning of the section, so that the section will begin at the specified alignment. align is an expression.
(NOLOAD)
Use `(NOLOAD)' to prevent a section from being loaded into memory each time it is accessed. For example, in the script sample below, the ROM segment is addressed at memory location `0' and does not need to be loaded into each object file:
SECTIONS {
  ROM  0  (NOLOAD)  : { ... }
  ...
}
AT ( ldadr )
The expression ldadr that follows the AT keyword specifies the load address of the section. The default (if you do not use the AT keyword) is to make the load address the same as the relocation address. This feature is designed to make it easy to build a ROM image. For example, this SECTIONS definition creates two output sections: one called `.text', which starts at 0x1000, and one called `.mdata', which is loaded at the end of the `.text' section even though its relocation address is 0x2000. The symbol _data is defined with the value 0x2000:
SECTIONS
  {
  .text 0x1000 : { *(.text) _etext = . ; }
  .mdata 0x2000 : 
    AT ( ADDR(.text) + SIZEOF ( .text ) )
    { _data = . ; *(.data); _edata = . ;  }
  .bss 0x3000 :
    { _bstart = . ;  *(.bss) *(COMMON) ; _bend = . ;}
}
The run-time initialization code (for C programs, usually crt0) for use with a ROM generated this way has to include something like the following, to copy the initialized data from the ROM image to its runtime address:
char *src = _etext;
char *dst = _data;

/* ROM has data at end of text; copy it. */
while (dst < _edata) {
  *dst++ = *src++;
}

/* Zero bss */
for (dst = _bstart; dst< _bend; dst++)
  *dst = 0;
>region
Assign this section to a previously defined region of memory. See section Memory Layout.
=fill
Including =fill in a section definition specifies the initial fill value for that section. You may use any expression to specify fill. Any unallocated holes in the current output section when written to the output file will be filled with the two least significant bytes of the value, repeated as necessary. You can also change the fill value with a FILL statement in the contents of a section definition.


Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.