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How to refer to the start-of a user-defined segment in a Visual Studio-project?

I'm struggling to convert a C-program linked with ld, of the gnu tool-chain to make it compile as a visual-studio (2005) project. The program puts .data-symbols in different segments and during an initialization phase it copies data between segments. Pointers to the start and end of the segments are defined in the ld linker script.

I understand how to locate the variables into different, user-defined segments, but i havent been able to figure out how to define linker constants such as _start_of_my_segment or if there is something similar to a linker script in Visual Studio.

My goal is to be able to compile the program with, prefferably no modifications to the source-code that refers to the linker-defined symbols, but with my own custom layout of the data in the Visual Studio project.

Below is some example C-code that illustrates what i'd like to do and a (stripped-down, possibly syntax-incorrect) version of the make-script used when linking with gcc/ld.

Any hints would be greatly appreciated!

#pragma data_seg( "MY_DATA_FOO" )
#pragma data_seg( "MY_DATA_BAR" )
#pragma comment(linker, "/section:MY_DATA_BAR,R")

__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO")) int foo1;
__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO")) int foo2;

__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_BAR")) int bar1 = 1;
__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_BAR")) int bar2 = 2;

#pragma data_seg( )
void test() {
    foo1 = bar1;
    foo2 = bar2;

    // i would rather do this as 
    //extern unsigned int __start_of_MY_DATA_FOO;
    //extern unsigned int __start_of_MY_DATA_BAR;
    //extern unsigned int __size_of_MY_DATA_BAR;
    //memcpy(__start_of_MY_DATA_FOO, _start_of_MY_DATA_BAR, _size_of_MY_DATA_BAR);
}

Pseudo link-script (what would be the equivalent for Visual Studio

MEMORY
{
  foo:  org=0x1000, len=0x10开发者_JAVA技巧0
  bar:  org=0x2000, len=0x100
}

SECTIONS
{
    GROUP:
    {
        MY_DATA_FOO : {}
        __start_of_MY_DATA_FOO = ADDR(MY_DATA_FOO);
        __end_of_MY_DATA_FOO = .;
        __size_of_MY_DATA_FOO = SIZEOF(MY_DATA_FOO);
    } > foo

    GROUP:
    {
        MY_DATA_BAR : {}
        __start_of_MY_DATA_BAR = ADDR(MY_DATA_BAR);
        __end_of_MY_DATA_BAR = .;
        __size_of_MY_DATA_BAR = SIZEOF(MY_DATA_BAR);
    } > bar
}


padding can be removed by segments merging

for example

#pragma data_seg(".foo_begin")
#pragma data_seg(".foo_data")
#pragma data_seg(".foo_end")

#pragma comment( linker, "/merge:.foo_begin=.foo" )
#pragma comment( linker, "/merge:.foo_data=.foo" )
#pragma comment( linker, "/merge:.foo_end=.foo" )

__declspec(allocate(".foo_begin")) int foo_begin_marker;
__declspec(allocate(".foo_end")) int foo_end_marker;

__declspec(allocate(".foo_data")) int foo_data;


Create additional segments (they are placed in memory alphabetically):

#pragma data_seg("MY_DATA_FOO__a")
#pragma data_seg("MY_DATA_FOO__z")
#pragma data_seg("MY_DATA_FOO__m")

__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO__a")) int fooFirst;
__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO__z")) int fooLast;
__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO__m")) int foo1;
__declspec(allocate("MY_DATA_FOO__m")) int foo2;

Then copy everything between &fooFirst and &fooLast.

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