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Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Oct 7, 2022

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petrochenkov
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In accordance with the design from #96827 (comment)

lld_flavor and linker_is_gnu fields are removed from internal target specs, but still parsed from JSON specs using compatibility layer introduced in #100552.
r? @lqd

@rustbot rustbot added the T-compiler Relevant to the compiler team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. label Sep 18, 2022
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⚠️ Warning ⚠️

@rust-highfive rust-highfive added the S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. label Sep 18, 2022
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lqd commented Sep 22, 2022

(I've already started looking at this and will finish this weekend)

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Woo! Thanks for starting to untangle the mess! Looks good overall, a couple small comments

| LinkerFlavor::Darwin(Cc::Yes, _)
| LinkerFlavor::WasmLld(Cc::Yes)
| LinkerFlavor::Unix(Cc::Yes) => LinkerFlavorCli::Gcc,
LinkerFlavor::Gnu(_, Lld::Yes) => LinkerFlavorCli::Lld(LldFlavor::Ld),
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Explicit Cc::No here since that's what we want here semantically vs "anything"? Makes it a little more resilient in-case the match arms get moved around in the future. Similarly for Darwin.

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That applies to Lld::No too, so you'd have to fill in all the redundant info in variants below to stay consistent. My initial thought was to not fill the redundant info to make it shorter and do not distract attention from the "important" part.

} else if stem == "lld" || stem == "rust-lld" {
LinkerFlavor::Lld(sess.target.lld_flavor)
let lld_flavor = sess.target.linker_flavor.lld_flavor();
LinkerFlavor::from_cli(LinkerFlavorCli::Lld(lld_flavor), &sess.target)
} else {
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Given we already have cases for ld.lld, lld-link and wasm-ld is there any reason not to have one for ld64.lld as well?

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I just didn't change any logic here, the linker name heuristic can be improved in multiple ways, e.g. accounting for cc and c++/g++/clang++ as well.

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Yea, that was just a small thing I noticed while reading through that bit. More for completeness sake since I don't think i've seen any complaints about that case missing

LinkerFlavor::WasmLld(Cc::No)
} else if stem == "ld" || stem.ends_with("-ld") {
LinkerFlavor::from_cli(LinkerFlavorCli::Ld, &sess.target)
} else if stem == "ld.lld" {
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Come to think of it, does this case even work as expected? file_stem on ld.lld would return ld meaning we never take this branch.

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It's reachable if it full file name was ld.lld.exe :)

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True but you'd think ld.lld is a lot more common than ld.lld.exe 😛

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Not impossible though!

we@we-pc MINGW64 ~
$ where ld.lld
C:\msys64\mingw64\bin\ld.lld.exe

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OK that was a mouthful. It's unfortunate that lld is forcing our hand to make things more complex, but they're also sometimes simpler/clearer than today with the new explicitness (albeit also more verbose).

I left a couple comments in addition to Luqman's (and an if that needs clarification or fixing), and with these done: r=me after rebase.

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lqd commented Sep 28, 2022

(Note that Github duplicated comments added to existing conversations when it posted the review, so they lost the context of what they're replying to, but that's present in the original conversations...)

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lqd commented Sep 28, 2022

@rustbot author

@rustbot rustbot added S-waiting-on-author Status: This is awaiting some action (such as code changes or more information) from the author. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels Sep 28, 2022
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@bors r=lqd

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bors commented Oct 5, 2022

📌 Commit 708874a7f704c5f6e85cb65a4ba488d03ea5603d has been approved by lqd

It is now in the queue for this repository.

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-author Status: This is awaiting some action (such as code changes or more information) from the author. labels Oct 5, 2022
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bors commented Oct 5, 2022

⌛ Testing commit 708874a7f704c5f6e85cb65a4ba488d03ea5603d with merge 2a0993ab9e0963429b6f47804e74f8975ef0ea08...

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@bors bors added S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. and removed S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. labels Oct 6, 2022
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Fixed an access to unsynchronized json fields in LinkerFlavor::from_cli.
@bors r=lqd

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bors commented Oct 6, 2022

📌 Commit 572b6a9 has been approved by lqd

It is now in the queue for this repository.

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels Oct 6, 2022
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bors commented Oct 7, 2022

⌛ Testing commit 572b6a9 with merge cf0fa76...

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bors commented Oct 7, 2022

☀️ Test successful - checks-actions
Approved by: lqd
Pushing cf0fa76 to master...

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Finished benchmarking commit (cf0fa76): comparison URL.

Overall result: no relevant changes - no action needed

@rustbot label: -perf-regression

Instruction count

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Max RSS (memory usage)

Results

This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.

mean1 range count2
Regressions ❌
(primary)
- - 0
Regressions ❌
(secondary)
2.3% [2.1%, 2.5%] 2
Improvements ✅
(primary)
- - 0
Improvements ✅
(secondary)
-3.1% [-4.4%, -2.2%] 3
All ❌✅ (primary) - - 0

Cycles

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Footnotes

  1. the arithmetic mean of the percent change

  2. number of relevant changes

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yuriks commented Oct 8, 2022

I believe that this change has broken the parsing of pre-link-args in custom json targets:

PS C:\Users\yuriks\projects\mkos> rustc +nightly-2022-10-07 -Z unstable-options --target ..\rust-bootloader\x86_64-bootloader.json --print target-spec-json
{
  "arch": "x86_64",
  "data-layout": "e-m:e-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128",
  "disable-redzone": true,
  "features": "-mmx,-sse,+soft-float",
  "linker": "rust-lld",
  "linker-flavor": "ld.lld",
  "llvm-target": "x86_64-unknown-none-gnu",
  "panic-strategy": "abort",
  "pre-link-args": {
    "ld.lld": [
      "--script=linker.ld",
      "--gc-sections",
      "--some-invalid-argument"
    ]
  },
  "relocation-model": "static",
  "target-pointer-width": "64"
}
PS C:\Users\yuriks\projects\mkos> rustc +nightly-2022-10-08 -Z unstable-options --target ..\rust-bootloader\x86_64-bootloader.json --print target-spec-json
{
  "arch": "x86_64",
  "data-layout": "e-m:e-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128",
  "disable-redzone": true,
  "features": "-mmx,-sse,+soft-float",
  "linker": "rust-lld",
  "linker-flavor": "ld.lld",
  "llvm-target": "x86_64-unknown-none-gnu",
  "panic-strategy": "abort",
  "relocation-model": "static",
  "target-pointer-width": "64"
}

I am unable to bisect the breakage down to a specific commit, but this is the only that changed relevant parts of the compiler between the two nightlies, and it seems that this change in particular would cause this breakage:

LinkerFlavor::Gnu(_, Lld::Yes)
| LinkerFlavor::Darwin(_, Lld::Yes)
| LinkerFlavor::Msvc(Lld::Yes) => {}

cf0fa76#diff-aa810a3be0834da891b171a8b04b09d0d3bbb76ac27c757cd232235099e062d2R1742

Is this intentional? If so, what's the new way of passing custom linker arguments via the target?

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@yuriks
No, the breakage is not intentional, this PR was supposed to keep backward compatibility with old target specs, I'll check what happens.

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@yuriks
Fixed in #102836.

JohnTitor added a commit to JohnTitor/rust that referenced this pull request Oct 12, 2022
rustc_target: Fix json target specs using LLD linker flavors in link args

Fixes rust-lang#101988 (comment) (a regression introduced by rust-lang#101988).
JohnTitor added a commit to JohnTitor/rust that referenced this pull request Oct 13, 2022
rustc_target: Fix json target specs using LLD linker flavors in link args

Fixes rust-lang#101988 (comment) (a regression introduced by rust-lang#101988).
Andy-Python-Programmer added a commit to Andy-Python-Programmer/aero that referenced this pull request Oct 27, 2022
Revert to using latest nightly as the rust toolchain since the blocker issue
(rust-lang/rust#101988 (comment)) has
been resolved.

Signed-off-by: Andy-Python-Programmer <andypythonappdeveloper@gmail.com>
@petrochenkov petrochenkov deleted the flavor2 branch February 22, 2025 18:30
rust-bors bot added a commit that referenced this pull request Jul 8, 2025
Use lld by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` stable

This PR and stabilization report is joint work with `@Kobzol.`

#### Use LLD on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` by default, and stabilize `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`

This PR proposes making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target for the artifacts we distribute, and also stabilizing the `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` codegen options to make it possible to opt out.

LLD has been used as the default linker on nightly and CI on this target since May 2024 ([PR](#124129), [blog post](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/17/enabling-rust-lld-on-linux.html)), and it seems like it is working fine, so we would like to propose stabilizing it.

The main motivation for using LLD instead of the default BFD linker is improving [compilation times](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=instructions%3Au&tab=compile). For example, in the linked benchmark, it makes incremental recompilation of `ripgrep` in `debug` more than twice faster. Another benefit is that Rust compilation becomes more consistent and self-contained, because we will use a known version of the LLD linker, rather than "whatever GNU ld version is on the user's system".

Due to the performance benefit being so huge, many people already opt into using LLD (or other fast linkers, such as mold) using various approaches ([1](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-flavor%5B%3D+%5Dgnu-lld-cc%2F), [2](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-features%5B%3D+%5D%5C%2Blld%2F), [3](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Atoml+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22), [4](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Arust+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22)). By making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target, we will be able to speed up Rust compilation out of the box, without users having to opt in or know about it.

> You can find an extended version of this stabilization report which includes analysis of crater results and more data [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view).

## What is being stabilized
- `rust-lld` being used as the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target.
    - Note that `rust-lld` is being enabled by default in the compiler artifacts distributed by our CI/rustup. It is still possible to use the system linker by default using `rust.lld = false` in `bootstrap.toml`, which can be useful e.g. for some Linux distros that might not want to use the LLD we distribute.
    - This is done by activating the LLD linker feature and using the self-contained linker on that target. Both of which are also usable on the CLI, if some opt outs are necessary, as described below.
- `-Clinker-features=-lld` on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target. This codegen option tells rustc to disable using the LLD linker.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (`cc`) remain unstable.
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using the flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of LLD on stable, which would it turn also opt out of using the self-contained linker (since it's an LLD).
- `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`. This codegen option tells rustc to use the self-contained linker. It's not particularly useful to turn it on by itself, but when enabled and combined with `-Clinker-features=+lld`, rustc will use the `rust-lld` linker wrapper shipped with the compiler toolchain, instead of some `lld` binary that the linker driver will find in the `PATH`.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (other than the previously stable `y/yes/n/no`).
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using this flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of using self-contained linking on stable. Doing this would then fall back to using the system `lld`.

To opt out of using LLD, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clinker-features=-lld"` would be used. To opt out of using `rust-lld`, falling back to the LLD installed on the system, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clink-self-contained=-linker"` would be used.

## Tests

When enabling `rust-lld` on nightly, we also switched x64 linux to use it at stage >= 1, meaning that all tests have been running with lld since May 2024, on CI as well as contributors' machines. (Post opt-dist tests also had been using it when running their test subset earlier than that).

There are also a few tests dedicated to the CLI behavior, or ensuring the default linker is indeed the one we expect:

- [link-self-contained-consistency](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-consistency.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained` options are not inconsistent (i.e. that passing both `+linker` and `-linker` is an error).
- [link-self-contained-unstable](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-unstable.rs): Checks that only the `-linker` and `y/yes/n/no` options for `-Clink-self-contained` are stable.
- [linker-features-unstable-cc](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-unstable-cc.rs): Checks that only the non-lld options of `-Clinker-features` are unstable.
- [linker-features-lld-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-lld-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clinker-features=-lld` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [link-self-contained-linker-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-linker-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [no-gc-encapsulation-symbols](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/no-gc-encapsulation-symbols.rs): Checks that that linker encapsulation symbols are not garbage collected by LLD, so that crates like [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) still work.
- [rust-lld](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld): Checks that LLD is actually used when enabled with `-Clinker-features=+lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=+linker`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu): Checks that LLD is used by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` when the bootstrap `rust.lld` config option is `true`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist): Dist test that checks that our distributed `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` archives actually use LLD by default.

## Ecosystem impact
As already stated, LLD has been used as the default linker on x64 Linux on nightly for almost a year, and we haven't seen any blockers to stabilization in that time. There were a handful of issues reported, these are discussed later below.

Furthermore, two crater runs ([November 2023](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-117684-2/index.html), [February 2025](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-137044-3/index.html)), were performed to test the impact of using LLD as the default linker. A triage of the earlier crater run was previously done [here](https://hackmd.io/OAJxlxc6Te6YUot9ftYSKQ), but all the important findings from both crater runs are reported below.

Below is a list of compatibility differences between BFD and LLD that we have encountered. There is a more thorough list of differences in [this post](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) from the current LLD maintainer. From that post, "99.9% pieces of software work with ld.lld without a change".

---

### `.ctors/.dtors` sections
[#128286](#128286) reported an issue where LLD was unable to link certain CUDA library was using these sections that were using the `.ctors/.dtors` ELF sections. These were deprecated a long time ago (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=46770), replaced with a more modern `.init_array/.fini_array` sections. LLD doesn't (and won't) support these sections ([1](llvm/llvm-project#68071), [2](llvm/llvm-project#30572)), so if they appear in input object files, the linked artifact might produce incorrect behavior, because e.g. some global variables might not get initialized properly.

However, the usage of `.ctors/.dtors` should be very rare in practice. We have performed a [crater run](#137044) to test this. It has identified only 8 crates where the `.ctors/.dtors` section is occurring in the final linked artifact. It was caused by a few crates using the `.ctors` link section manually, and by using a very (~6 year) old version of the [ctor](https://crates.io/crates/ctor) crate.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#ctorsdtors-sections)

**Possible workaround**
It is possible to [detect](e5e2316) if `.ctors/.dtors` section is present in the final linked artifact (LLD will keep it there, but it won't be populated), and warn users about it. This check is very cheap and doesn't even appear on [perf](#112049 (comment)). We have benchmarked the check on a 240 MiB Chrome binary, where it took 0.8ms with page cache flushed, and 0.06ms with page cache primed (which should be the common case, as the linked artifact is written to disk just before the check is performed).

In theory, this could be also solved with a linker script that moves `.ctors` to `.init_array`.

We think that these sections should be so rare that it is not worth it to implement any workarounds for now.

---

### Different garbage collection behavior
[#130397](#130397) reported an issue where LLD prunes a local symbol, so it is missing in the linked artifact. However, BFD keeps the same symbol, so it is a regression. This is caused by a difference in linker garbage collection.

Rust uses `--gc-sections` and puts each function into a separate linker section, which prunes unused code. There is some code (specifically the somewhat popular [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) crate) that (arguably ab-)uses so called linker encapsulation symbols to achieve distributed slices.

BFD (2.37+) uses a conservative linking mode that works as intended with this behavior, but it might slightly increase binary size of the linked artifact. LLD does not use this workaround by default, which causes the sections to be eliminated, but it can be made to use the conservative mode using [`-z nostart-stop-gc`](https://lld.llvm.org/ELF/start-stop-gc.html#z-start-stop-gc).

To avoid this issue, we told LLD to use the [conservative mode](#137685), which maintains backwards compatibility with BFD. We found that it has [no effect](#112049 (comment)) on compilation performance and binary size in our benchmark suite. With this change, `linkme` works. Since then, #140872 removed `linkme` distributed slice's dependence on conservative GC behavior, so this PR also removes that conservative mode: no transition period is necessary, as the PR immediately fixed the crate with no source changes.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Different-garbage-collection-behavior)

---

### Various uncommon issues

A small number of issues that only occurred in a handful of instances were found in crater, and it is unclear if LLD is at fault or if there is some other issue that was not detected with BFD.

You can examine these [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Various-uncommon-issues).

---

### Missing jobserver support
LLD doesn't support the jobserver protocol for limiting the number of threads used, it simply defaults to using all available cores, and is one of the reasons why it's faster than BFD. However, this should mostly be a non-issue, because most of the linking done during high parallelism sections of `cargo build` is linking of build scripts and proc macros, which are typically very fast to link (e.g. ~50ms), and a potential oversubscription of cores thus doesn't hurt that much.

When the final artifact is linked (which typically takes the most time), there should be no other sources of parallelism conflicts from compiling other code, so LLD should be able to use all available threads.

That being said, it is a difference of behavior, where previously a `-j` flag was generally not using more cpu than the specified limit. It can be impactful in some resource-constrained systems, but to be clear that is already the case today due to [cargo parallelism](rust-lang/cargo#9157). This could be one reason to opt out of using `rust-lld` on some systems.

LLD has support for limiting the number of threads to use, so in theory rustc could try to get all the jobserver tokens available and use that as lld's thread limit. It'd still be suboptimal as new tokens would not be dynamically detected, and we could be using less threads than available.

We did a benchmark on a real-world crate that shows that using multiple LLD threads for intermediate artifacts doesn't seem to have a performance effect. You can find it [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Missing-jobserver-support).

---

#### Opting out of LLD in the ecosystem
We have also examined repositories where people opted out of LLD on nightly, using [this GitHub query](https://github.com/search?q=%22linker-features%3D-lld%22&type=code). The summary can be found below:

<details>
<summary>Summary of LLD opt outs</summary>

> This examination was performed on 2025-03-09.

Here we briefly examine the most common reasons why people use `-Zlinker-features=-lld`, based on comments and git history.

- Nix/NixOS ([1](https://github.com/rszyma/vscode-kanata/blob/59d703dff5a238b14ab3759cac27f73fb34bbcfe/flake.nix#L33), [2](https://github.com/sbernauer/breakwater/blob/3cc3449fc126c5c99d4a971733fd32be589884e0/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [3](https://github.com/tiiuae/ebpf-firewall/blame/32bdb17cedd1c9bea1ab3482623de458d95da7d0/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [4](https://github.com/jules-sommer/wavetheme-gen/blob/f5f657d014d4a30607625afb70f810c229c0294e/Cargo.toml#L4), [5](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/zside-rust/blob/e4266f5c5571a1b180a9c70cf0939c7070e410c7/.cargo/config.toml#L10), [6](https://github.com/przyjacielpkp/zkml/blob/22a4aef24e9d2c77789229d7c634fc67e9eb1184/README.md?plain=1#L78), [7](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/thunder-rust/blob/2222d53474c8d2d0428b4c56f8157095dced6d5a/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [8](https://github.com/enesoztrk/nixos-tc-aya-test/blob/b2ffa59d3eba8b60fd04b0a4c8bbe047400eb981/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [9](https://github.com/lowRISC/container-hotplug/blob/3ead4ef9c7f79c303392178c99677dbecff1aea6/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [10](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/lsp-client/src/extension.ts#L94))
    - There was an [issue](NixOS/nixpkgs#312661) with LLD, which seems to have been fixed with NixOS/nixpkgs#314268.
 It's unclear whether that fixed all the Nix issues though.
- Issues with linkme ([1](https://github.com/0xPolygonZero/zk_evm/blob/ef388619ffbd5305209519a3a5bc0396185d68ac/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [2](https://github.com/conjure-cp/conjure-oxide/blob/be0fc5827ff90e8486d416cc184b6ce24f73bf01/README.md?plain=1#L20), [3](https://github.com/clchiou/garage/blob/c5d8444d56bb6ee24ca95e5c6b9880ed996f4918/rust/.cargo/config.toml#L6), [4](https://github.com/PonasKovas/craftflow/blob/5b4cc1a5196e08a975368399fefda4b71f3a2f6f/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [5](https://github.com/kezhuw/zookeeper-client-rust/blob/4e27c7de2a7cc5e709af012b791c8fea9bb47f1f/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L82), [6](https://github.com/niklasdewally/conjure-oxide/blob/8fe60c12bca7011a2f9eded4b7c95ad0e77b6f44/.github/workflows/code-coverage.yml#L48), [7](https://github.com/kezhuw/spawns/blob/c8b468379805de9df3287c01b94b4ed3db6b61ed/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L74))
    - These should be resolved with the conservative garbage collection ([#137685](#137685)).
- Bazel ([1](https://github.com/google-parfait/confidential-federated-compute/blob/1823f69ed8f5f4f819f7bfa21da1ca629fdc826b/.bazelrc#L71)), WASM ([1](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/wasm-build.sh#L37), [2](https://github.com/yacineb/pgrx-wasi-test/blob/2bf99037ca1b650b2cbc35f1257a87fb6ead0920/build.sh#L21)), uncategorized ([2](https://github.com/nbdd0121/r2vm/blob/5118be6b9e757c6fef2f019385873f403c23c548/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [3](https://github.com/Wyvern/Img/blame/45020c7e1dc4926c8129647014c708db0c13f463/.cargo/config.toml#L209), [4](https://github.com/arnaudpoullet/leptos-i18n-compile-error/blob/042eb835f7ca0dc36be67cf7fe65b35b22b6059f/README.md?plain=1#L89), [5](https://github.com/JonLeeCon/numerical-rust-cpu/blob/fd0b3006768ed81c56147044dc05c92b11b7b6f0/exercises/.cargo/config.toml#L13), [6](https://github.com/PonasKovas/shallowclone/blob/be65f2ec923cac6ceedbc8db520c89969ebfce7c/.github/workflows/rust.yml#L20))
    - Reason unclear.
</details>

## History
The idea to use a faster linker by default has been on the radar for quite some time ([#39915](#39915), [#71515](#71515)). There were [very early attempts](#29974) to use the gold linker by default, but these had to be [reverted](#30913) because of compatibility issues. Support for LLD was implemented back in [2017](#40018), but it has not been made default yet, except for some more niche targets, such as [WASM](#48125), [ARM Cortex](#53648) or [RISC-V](#53822).

It took quite some time to figure out how should the interface for selecting the linker (and the way it is invoked) look like, as it differs a lot between different platforms, linkers and compiler drivers. During that time, LLD has matured and achieved [almost perfect compatibility](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) with the default Linux linker (BFD).

- [#56351](#56351) stabilized `-Clinker-flavor`, which is used to determine how to invoke the linker. It is especially useful on targets where selecting the linker directly with `-Clinker` is not possible or is impractical.
    - December 2018, author `@davidtwco,` reviewer `@nagisa`
- [#76158](#76158) stabilized `-Clink-self-contained=[y|n]`, which allows overriding the compiler's heuristic for deciding whether it should use self-contained or external tools (linker, sanitizers, libc, etc.). It only allowed using the self-contained mode either for everything (`y`) or nothing (`n`), but did not allow granular choice.
    - September 2020, author `@mati864,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#85961](#85961) implemented the `-Zgcc-ld` flag, which was a hacky way of opting into LLD usage.
    - June 2021, author `@sledgehammervampire,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [MCP 510](rust-lang/compiler-team#510) proposed stabilizing the behavior of `-Zgcc-ld` using more granular flags (`-Clink-self-contained=linker -Clinker-flavor=gcc-lld`).
    - Initially implemented in [#96827](#96827), but `@petrochenkov` [suggested](#96827 (comment)) a slightly different approach.
    - The PR was split into [#96884](#96884), where it was decided what will be the individual components of `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - And [#96401](#96401), which implemented the `-Clinker-flavor` part.
    - The MCP was finally implemented in [#112910](#112910).
    - [#116514](#116514) then removed `-Zgcc-ld`, as it was replaced by `-Clinker-flavor=gnu-lld-cc` + `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - April 2022 - October 2023, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`

- Various linker handling refactorings were performed in the meantime: [#97375](#97375), [#98212](#98212), [#100126](#100126), [#100552](#100552), [#102836](#102836), [#110807](#110807), [#101988](#101988), [#116515](#116515)

- The implementation of linker flavors with LLD was causing a sort of a combinatorial explosion of various options.
[#119906](#119906) suggested a different approach for linker flavors (described [here](#119906 (comment))), where the individual flavors could be enabled separately using `+/-` (e.g. `+lld`).
    - After some back and forth, this idea was moved to `-Clinker-features` (see [comment 1](#119906 (comment)) and [comment 2](#119906 (comment))), which was implemented in [#123656](#123656).
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#124129](#124129) enabled LLD by default on nightly.
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#137685](#137685), [#137926](#137926) enabled the conservative gargage collection mode (`-znostart-stop-gc`) to improve compatibility with BFD.
    - February 2025, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov` (implementation), author `@kobzol,` reviewer `@lqd` (test)
- [#96025](#96025) (April 2022), [#117684](#117684) (November 2023), [#137044](#137044) (February 2025): crater runs.

## Unresolved questions/concerns
- Is changing the linker considered a breaking change? In (hopefully very rare) cases, it might break some existing code. It should mostly only affect the final linked artifact, so it should be easy to opt out.
- Similarly, is the single-threaded behavior of such tools encompassed in our stability guarantee: it can be observed via the `-j` job limit (though I believe we have/had some open issues on sometimes using more CPU resources than the job count limit implied). As mentioned above, LLD does not support the jobserver protocol.
- A concern [was raised](#71515 (comment)) about increased memory usage of LLD. We should probably let users know about the possibly increased memory usage, and jobserver incompatibility: we did so when announcing this landing on nightly.
- LLD seems to produce [slightly larger](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=size%3Alinked_artifact&tab=compile) binary artifacts. This can be partially clawed back using Identical Code Folding (`-Clink-args=-Wl,--icf=all`).
- Should we detect the outdated `.ctors/.dtors` sections to provide a better error message, even if that should be rare in practice?

---

### Next steps

After the FCP completes:
- we should land this PR at the beginning of a beta cycle, to maximize time for testing
- keep an eye on the beta crater run results for possible linker issues (or do a dedicated beta crater run with only this change)
- release a blog post announcing the change, and asking for testing feedback of the appropriate beta
- depending on feedback, or if a period of testing of 6 weeks is not long enough, we could keep this change on beta for another cycle

---

Development, testing, try builds were done in #138645.

r? `@petrochenkov`
`@rustbot` label +needs-fcp +T-compiler
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: i686-gnu-*
bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Jul 8, 2025
Use lld by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` stable

This PR and stabilization report is joint work with `@Kobzol.`

#### Use LLD on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` by default, and stabilize `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`

This PR proposes making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target for the artifacts we distribute, and also stabilizing the `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` codegen options to make it possible to opt out.

LLD has been used as the default linker on nightly and CI on this target since May 2024 ([PR](#124129), [blog post](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/17/enabling-rust-lld-on-linux.html)), and it seems like it is working fine, so we would like to propose stabilizing it.

The main motivation for using LLD instead of the default BFD linker is improving [compilation times](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=instructions%3Au&tab=compile). For example, in the linked benchmark, it makes incremental recompilation of `ripgrep` in `debug` more than twice faster. Another benefit is that Rust compilation becomes more consistent and self-contained, because we will use a known version of the LLD linker, rather than "whatever GNU ld version is on the user's system".

Due to the performance benefit being so huge, many people already opt into using LLD (or other fast linkers, such as mold) using various approaches ([1](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-flavor%5B%3D+%5Dgnu-lld-cc%2F), [2](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-features%5B%3D+%5D%5C%2Blld%2F), [3](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Atoml+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22), [4](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Arust+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22)). By making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target, we will be able to speed up Rust compilation out of the box, without users having to opt in or know about it.

> You can find an extended version of this stabilization report which includes analysis of crater results and more data [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view).

## What is being stabilized
- `rust-lld` being used as the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target.
    - Note that `rust-lld` is being enabled by default in the compiler artifacts distributed by our CI/rustup. It is still possible to use the system linker by default using `rust.lld = false` in `bootstrap.toml`, which can be useful e.g. for some Linux distros that might not want to use the LLD we distribute.
    - This is done by activating the LLD linker feature and using the self-contained linker on that target. Both of which are also usable on the CLI, if some opt outs are necessary, as described below.
- `-Clinker-features=-lld` on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target. This codegen option tells rustc to disable using the LLD linker.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (`cc`) remain unstable.
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using the flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of LLD on stable, which would it turn also opt out of using the self-contained linker (since it's an LLD).
- `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`. This codegen option tells rustc to use the self-contained linker. It's not particularly useful to turn it on by itself, but when enabled and combined with `-Clinker-features=+lld`, rustc will use the `rust-lld` linker wrapper shipped with the compiler toolchain, instead of some `lld` binary that the linker driver will find in the `PATH`.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (other than the previously stable `y/yes/n/no`).
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using this flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of using self-contained linking on stable. Doing this would then fall back to using the system `lld`.

To opt out of using LLD, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clinker-features=-lld"` would be used. To opt out of using `rust-lld`, falling back to the LLD installed on the system, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clink-self-contained=-linker"` would be used.

## Tests

When enabling `rust-lld` on nightly, we also switched x64 linux to use it at stage >= 1, meaning that all tests have been running with lld since May 2024, on CI as well as contributors' machines. (Post opt-dist tests also had been using it when running their test subset earlier than that).

There are also a few tests dedicated to the CLI behavior, or ensuring the default linker is indeed the one we expect:

- [link-self-contained-consistency](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-consistency.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained` options are not inconsistent (i.e. that passing both `+linker` and `-linker` is an error).
- [link-self-contained-unstable](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-unstable.rs): Checks that only the `-linker` and `y/yes/n/no` options for `-Clink-self-contained` are stable.
- [linker-features-unstable-cc](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-unstable-cc.rs): Checks that only the non-lld options of `-Clinker-features` are unstable.
- [linker-features-lld-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-lld-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clinker-features=-lld` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [link-self-contained-linker-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-linker-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [no-gc-encapsulation-symbols](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/no-gc-encapsulation-symbols.rs): Checks that that linker encapsulation symbols are not garbage collected by LLD, so that crates like [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) still work.
- [rust-lld](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld): Checks that LLD is actually used when enabled with `-Clinker-features=+lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=+linker`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu): Checks that LLD is used by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` when the bootstrap `rust.lld` config option is `true`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist): Dist test that checks that our distributed `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` archives actually use LLD by default.

## Ecosystem impact
As already stated, LLD has been used as the default linker on x64 Linux on nightly for almost a year, and we haven't seen any blockers to stabilization in that time. There were a handful of issues reported, these are discussed later below.

Furthermore, two crater runs ([November 2023](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-117684-2/index.html), [February 2025](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-137044-3/index.html)), were performed to test the impact of using LLD as the default linker. A triage of the earlier crater run was previously done [here](https://hackmd.io/OAJxlxc6Te6YUot9ftYSKQ), but all the important findings from both crater runs are reported below.

Below is a list of compatibility differences between BFD and LLD that we have encountered. There is a more thorough list of differences in [this post](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) from the current LLD maintainer. From that post, "99.9% pieces of software work with ld.lld without a change".

---

### `.ctors/.dtors` sections
[#128286](#128286) reported an issue where LLD was unable to link certain CUDA library was using these sections that were using the `.ctors/.dtors` ELF sections. These were deprecated a long time ago (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=46770), replaced with a more modern `.init_array/.fini_array` sections. LLD doesn't (and won't) support these sections ([1](llvm/llvm-project#68071), [2](llvm/llvm-project#30572)), so if they appear in input object files, the linked artifact might produce incorrect behavior, because e.g. some global variables might not get initialized properly.

However, the usage of `.ctors/.dtors` should be very rare in practice. We have performed a [crater run](#137044) to test this. It has identified only 8 crates where the `.ctors/.dtors` section is occurring in the final linked artifact. It was caused by a few crates using the `.ctors` link section manually, and by using a very (~6 year) old version of the [ctor](https://crates.io/crates/ctor) crate.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#ctorsdtors-sections)

**Possible workaround**
It is possible to [detect](e5e2316) if `.ctors/.dtors` section is present in the final linked artifact (LLD will keep it there, but it won't be populated), and warn users about it. This check is very cheap and doesn't even appear on [perf](#112049 (comment)). We have benchmarked the check on a 240 MiB Chrome binary, where it took 0.8ms with page cache flushed, and 0.06ms with page cache primed (which should be the common case, as the linked artifact is written to disk just before the check is performed).

In theory, this could be also solved with a linker script that moves `.ctors` to `.init_array`.

We think that these sections should be so rare that it is not worth it to implement any workarounds for now.

---

### Different garbage collection behavior
[#130397](#130397) reported an issue where LLD prunes a local symbol, so it is missing in the linked artifact. However, BFD keeps the same symbol, so it is a regression. This is caused by a difference in linker garbage collection.

Rust uses `--gc-sections` and puts each function into a separate linker section, which prunes unused code. There is some code (specifically the somewhat popular [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) crate) that (arguably ab-)uses so called linker encapsulation symbols to achieve distributed slices.

BFD (2.37+) uses a conservative linking mode that works as intended with this behavior, but it might slightly increase binary size of the linked artifact. LLD does not use this workaround by default, which causes the sections to be eliminated, but it can be made to use the conservative mode using [`-z nostart-stop-gc`](https://lld.llvm.org/ELF/start-stop-gc.html#z-start-stop-gc).

To avoid this issue, we told LLD to use the [conservative mode](#137685), which maintains backwards compatibility with BFD. We found that it has [no effect](#112049 (comment)) on compilation performance and binary size in our benchmark suite. With this change, `linkme` works. Since then, #140872 removed `linkme` distributed slice's dependence on conservative GC behavior, so this PR also removes that conservative mode: no transition period is necessary, as the PR immediately fixed the crate with no source changes.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Different-garbage-collection-behavior)

---

### Various uncommon issues

A small number of issues that only occurred in a handful of instances were found in crater, and it is unclear if LLD is at fault or if there is some other issue that was not detected with BFD.

You can examine these [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Various-uncommon-issues).

---

### Missing jobserver support
LLD doesn't support the jobserver protocol for limiting the number of threads used, it simply defaults to using all available cores, and is one of the reasons why it's faster than BFD. However, this should mostly be a non-issue, because most of the linking done during high parallelism sections of `cargo build` is linking of build scripts and proc macros, which are typically very fast to link (e.g. ~50ms), and a potential oversubscription of cores thus doesn't hurt that much.

When the final artifact is linked (which typically takes the most time), there should be no other sources of parallelism conflicts from compiling other code, so LLD should be able to use all available threads.

That being said, it is a difference of behavior, where previously a `-j` flag was generally not using more cpu than the specified limit. It can be impactful in some resource-constrained systems, but to be clear that is already the case today due to [cargo parallelism](rust-lang/cargo#9157). This could be one reason to opt out of using `rust-lld` on some systems.

LLD has support for limiting the number of threads to use, so in theory rustc could try to get all the jobserver tokens available and use that as lld's thread limit. It'd still be suboptimal as new tokens would not be dynamically detected, and we could be using less threads than available.

We did a benchmark on a real-world crate that shows that using multiple LLD threads for intermediate artifacts doesn't seem to have a performance effect. You can find it [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Missing-jobserver-support).

---

#### Opting out of LLD in the ecosystem
We have also examined repositories where people opted out of LLD on nightly, using [this GitHub query](https://github.com/search?q=%22linker-features%3D-lld%22&type=code). The summary can be found below:

<details>
<summary>Summary of LLD opt outs</summary>

> This examination was performed on 2025-03-09.

Here we briefly examine the most common reasons why people use `-Zlinker-features=-lld`, based on comments and git history.

- Nix/NixOS ([1](https://github.com/rszyma/vscode-kanata/blob/59d703dff5a238b14ab3759cac27f73fb34bbcfe/flake.nix#L33), [2](https://github.com/sbernauer/breakwater/blob/3cc3449fc126c5c99d4a971733fd32be589884e0/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [3](https://github.com/tiiuae/ebpf-firewall/blame/32bdb17cedd1c9bea1ab3482623de458d95da7d0/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [4](https://github.com/jules-sommer/wavetheme-gen/blob/f5f657d014d4a30607625afb70f810c229c0294e/Cargo.toml#L4), [5](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/zside-rust/blob/e4266f5c5571a1b180a9c70cf0939c7070e410c7/.cargo/config.toml#L10), [6](https://github.com/przyjacielpkp/zkml/blob/22a4aef24e9d2c77789229d7c634fc67e9eb1184/README.md?plain=1#L78), [7](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/thunder-rust/blob/2222d53474c8d2d0428b4c56f8157095dced6d5a/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [8](https://github.com/enesoztrk/nixos-tc-aya-test/blob/b2ffa59d3eba8b60fd04b0a4c8bbe047400eb981/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [9](https://github.com/lowRISC/container-hotplug/blob/3ead4ef9c7f79c303392178c99677dbecff1aea6/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [10](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/lsp-client/src/extension.ts#L94))
    - There was an [issue](NixOS/nixpkgs#312661) with LLD, which seems to have been fixed with NixOS/nixpkgs#314268.
 It's unclear whether that fixed all the Nix issues though.
- Issues with linkme ([1](https://github.com/0xPolygonZero/zk_evm/blob/ef388619ffbd5305209519a3a5bc0396185d68ac/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [2](https://github.com/conjure-cp/conjure-oxide/blob/be0fc5827ff90e8486d416cc184b6ce24f73bf01/README.md?plain=1#L20), [3](https://github.com/clchiou/garage/blob/c5d8444d56bb6ee24ca95e5c6b9880ed996f4918/rust/.cargo/config.toml#L6), [4](https://github.com/PonasKovas/craftflow/blob/5b4cc1a5196e08a975368399fefda4b71f3a2f6f/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [5](https://github.com/kezhuw/zookeeper-client-rust/blob/4e27c7de2a7cc5e709af012b791c8fea9bb47f1f/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L82), [6](https://github.com/niklasdewally/conjure-oxide/blob/8fe60c12bca7011a2f9eded4b7c95ad0e77b6f44/.github/workflows/code-coverage.yml#L48), [7](https://github.com/kezhuw/spawns/blob/c8b468379805de9df3287c01b94b4ed3db6b61ed/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L74))
    - These should be resolved with the conservative garbage collection ([#137685](#137685)).
- Bazel ([1](https://github.com/google-parfait/confidential-federated-compute/blob/1823f69ed8f5f4f819f7bfa21da1ca629fdc826b/.bazelrc#L71)), WASM ([1](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/wasm-build.sh#L37), [2](https://github.com/yacineb/pgrx-wasi-test/blob/2bf99037ca1b650b2cbc35f1257a87fb6ead0920/build.sh#L21)), uncategorized ([2](https://github.com/nbdd0121/r2vm/blob/5118be6b9e757c6fef2f019385873f403c23c548/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [3](https://github.com/Wyvern/Img/blame/45020c7e1dc4926c8129647014c708db0c13f463/.cargo/config.toml#L209), [4](https://github.com/arnaudpoullet/leptos-i18n-compile-error/blob/042eb835f7ca0dc36be67cf7fe65b35b22b6059f/README.md?plain=1#L89), [5](https://github.com/JonLeeCon/numerical-rust-cpu/blob/fd0b3006768ed81c56147044dc05c92b11b7b6f0/exercises/.cargo/config.toml#L13), [6](https://github.com/PonasKovas/shallowclone/blob/be65f2ec923cac6ceedbc8db520c89969ebfce7c/.github/workflows/rust.yml#L20))
    - Reason unclear.
</details>

## History
The idea to use a faster linker by default has been on the radar for quite some time ([#39915](#39915), [#71515](#71515)). There were [very early attempts](#29974) to use the gold linker by default, but these had to be [reverted](#30913) because of compatibility issues. Support for LLD was implemented back in [2017](#40018), but it has not been made default yet, except for some more niche targets, such as [WASM](#48125), [ARM Cortex](#53648) or [RISC-V](#53822).

It took quite some time to figure out how should the interface for selecting the linker (and the way it is invoked) look like, as it differs a lot between different platforms, linkers and compiler drivers. During that time, LLD has matured and achieved [almost perfect compatibility](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) with the default Linux linker (BFD).

- [#56351](#56351) stabilized `-Clinker-flavor`, which is used to determine how to invoke the linker. It is especially useful on targets where selecting the linker directly with `-Clinker` is not possible or is impractical.
    - December 2018, author `@davidtwco,` reviewer `@nagisa`
- [#76158](#76158) stabilized `-Clink-self-contained=[y|n]`, which allows overriding the compiler's heuristic for deciding whether it should use self-contained or external tools (linker, sanitizers, libc, etc.). It only allowed using the self-contained mode either for everything (`y`) or nothing (`n`), but did not allow granular choice.
    - September 2020, author `@mati864,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#85961](#85961) implemented the `-Zgcc-ld` flag, which was a hacky way of opting into LLD usage.
    - June 2021, author `@sledgehammervampire,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [MCP 510](rust-lang/compiler-team#510) proposed stabilizing the behavior of `-Zgcc-ld` using more granular flags (`-Clink-self-contained=linker -Clinker-flavor=gcc-lld`).
    - Initially implemented in [#96827](#96827), but `@petrochenkov` [suggested](#96827 (comment)) a slightly different approach.
    - The PR was split into [#96884](#96884), where it was decided what will be the individual components of `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - And [#96401](#96401), which implemented the `-Clinker-flavor` part.
    - The MCP was finally implemented in [#112910](#112910).
    - [#116514](#116514) then removed `-Zgcc-ld`, as it was replaced by `-Clinker-flavor=gnu-lld-cc` + `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - April 2022 - October 2023, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`

- Various linker handling refactorings were performed in the meantime: [#97375](#97375), [#98212](#98212), [#100126](#100126), [#100552](#100552), [#102836](#102836), [#110807](#110807), [#101988](#101988), [#116515](#116515)

- The implementation of linker flavors with LLD was causing a sort of a combinatorial explosion of various options.
[#119906](#119906) suggested a different approach for linker flavors (described [here](#119906 (comment))), where the individual flavors could be enabled separately using `+/-` (e.g. `+lld`).
    - After some back and forth, this idea was moved to `-Clinker-features` (see [comment 1](#119906 (comment)) and [comment 2](#119906 (comment))), which was implemented in [#123656](#123656).
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#124129](#124129) enabled LLD by default on nightly.
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#137685](#137685), [#137926](#137926) enabled the conservative gargage collection mode (`-znostart-stop-gc`) to improve compatibility with BFD.
    - February 2025, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov` (implementation), author `@kobzol,` reviewer `@lqd` (test)
- [#96025](#96025) (April 2022), [#117684](#117684) (November 2023), [#137044](#137044) (February 2025): crater runs.

## Unresolved questions/concerns
- Is changing the linker considered a breaking change? In (hopefully very rare) cases, it might break some existing code. It should mostly only affect the final linked artifact, so it should be easy to opt out.
- Similarly, is the single-threaded behavior of such tools encompassed in our stability guarantee: it can be observed via the `-j` job limit (though I believe we have/had some open issues on sometimes using more CPU resources than the job count limit implied). As mentioned above, LLD does not support the jobserver protocol.
- A concern [was raised](#71515 (comment)) about increased memory usage of LLD. We should probably let users know about the possibly increased memory usage, and jobserver incompatibility: we did so when announcing this landing on nightly.
- LLD seems to produce [slightly larger](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=size%3Alinked_artifact&tab=compile) binary artifacts. This can be partially clawed back using Identical Code Folding (`-Clink-args=-Wl,--icf=all`).
- Should we detect the outdated `.ctors/.dtors` sections to provide a better error message, even if that should be rare in practice?

---

### Next steps

After the FCP completes:
- we should land this PR at the beginning of a beta cycle, to maximize time for testing
- keep an eye on the beta crater run results for possible linker issues (or do a dedicated beta crater run with only this change)
- release a blog post announcing the change, and asking for testing feedback of the appropriate beta
- depending on feedback, or if a period of testing of 6 weeks is not long enough, we could keep this change on beta for another cycle

---

Development, testing, try builds were done in #138645.

r? `@petrochenkov`
`@rustbot` label +needs-fcp +T-compiler
bors added a commit that referenced this pull request Jul 8, 2025
Use lld by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` stable

This PR and stabilization report is joint work with `@Kobzol.`

#### Use LLD on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` by default, and stabilize `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`

This PR proposes making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target for the artifacts we distribute, and also stabilizing the `-Clinker-features=-lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` codegen options to make it possible to opt out.

LLD has been used as the default linker on nightly and CI on this target since May 2024 ([PR](#124129), [blog post](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/17/enabling-rust-lld-on-linux.html)), and it seems like it is working fine, so we would like to propose stabilizing it.

The main motivation for using LLD instead of the default BFD linker is improving [compilation times](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=instructions%3Au&tab=compile). For example, in the linked benchmark, it makes incremental recompilation of `ripgrep` in `debug` more than twice faster. Another benefit is that Rust compilation becomes more consistent and self-contained, because we will use a known version of the LLD linker, rather than "whatever GNU ld version is on the user's system".

Due to the performance benefit being so huge, many people already opt into using LLD (or other fast linkers, such as mold) using various approaches ([1](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-flavor%5B%3D+%5Dgnu-lld-cc%2F), [2](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=%2Flinker-features%5B%3D+%5D%5C%2Blld%2F), [3](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Atoml+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22), [4](https://github.com/search?type=code&q=language%3Arust+%22-fuse-ld%3Dlld%22)). By making LLD the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target, we will be able to speed up Rust compilation out of the box, without users having to opt in or know about it.

> You can find an extended version of this stabilization report which includes analysis of crater results and more data [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view).

## What is being stabilized
- `rust-lld` being used as the default linker on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target.
    - Note that `rust-lld` is being enabled by default in the compiler artifacts distributed by our CI/rustup. It is still possible to use the system linker by default using `rust.lld = false` in `bootstrap.toml`, which can be useful e.g. for some Linux distros that might not want to use the LLD we distribute.
    - This is done by activating the LLD linker feature and using the self-contained linker on that target. Both of which are also usable on the CLI, if some opt outs are necessary, as described below.
- `-Clinker-features=-lld` on the `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` target. This codegen option tells rustc to disable using the LLD linker.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (`cc`) remain unstable.
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using the flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of LLD on stable, which would it turn also opt out of using the self-contained linker (since it's an LLD).
- `-Clink-self-contained=-linker`. This codegen option tells rustc to use the self-contained linker. It's not particularly useful to turn it on by itself, but when enabled and combined with `-Clinker-features=+lld`, rustc will use the `rust-lld` linker wrapper shipped with the compiler toolchain, instead of some `lld` binary that the linker driver will find in the `PATH`.
    - Note that other options for this codegen flag (other than the previously stable `y/yes/n/no`).
    - Note that only the opt-out is being stabilized, and only for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`: opting in, or using this flag on other targets would still need to pass `-Zunstable-options`.
    - This flag is being stabilized so that users can opt out of using self-contained linking on stable. Doing this would then fall back to using the system `lld`.

To opt out of using LLD, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clinker-features=-lld"` would be used. To opt out of using `rust-lld`, falling back to the LLD installed on the system, `RUSTFLAGS="-Clink-self-contained=-linker"` would be used.

## Tests

When enabling `rust-lld` on nightly, we also switched x64 linux to use it at stage >= 1, meaning that all tests have been running with lld since May 2024, on CI as well as contributors' machines. (Post opt-dist tests also had been using it when running their test subset earlier than that).

There are also a few tests dedicated to the CLI behavior, or ensuring the default linker is indeed the one we expect:

- [link-self-contained-consistency](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-consistency.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained` options are not inconsistent (i.e. that passing both `+linker` and `-linker` is an error).
- [link-self-contained-unstable](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-unstable.rs): Checks that only the `-linker` and `y/yes/n/no` options for `-Clink-self-contained` are stable.
- [linker-features-unstable-cc](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-unstable-cc.rs): Checks that only the non-lld options of `-Clinker-features` are unstable.
- [linker-features-lld-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/linker-features-lld-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clinker-features=-lld` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [link-self-contained-linker-disallowed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/link-self-contained-linker-disallowed.rs): Checks that `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` is only stable on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.
- [no-gc-encapsulation-symbols](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/ui/linking/no-gc-encapsulation-symbols.rs): Checks that that linker encapsulation symbols are not garbage collected by LLD, so that crates like [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) still work.
- [rust-lld](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld): Checks that LLD is actually used when enabled with `-Clinker-features=+lld` and `-Clink-self-contained=+linker`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu): Checks that LLD is used by default on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` when the bootstrap `rust.lld` config option is `true`.
- [rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1117bc1e6ce049495b0044dfe756afafc817d2d7/tests/run-make/rust-lld-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu-dist): Dist test that checks that our distributed `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` archives actually use LLD by default.

## Ecosystem impact
As already stated, LLD has been used as the default linker on x64 Linux on nightly for almost a year, and we haven't seen any blockers to stabilization in that time. There were a handful of issues reported, these are discussed later below.

Furthermore, two crater runs ([November 2023](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-117684-2/index.html), [February 2025](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-137044-3/index.html)), were performed to test the impact of using LLD as the default linker. A triage of the earlier crater run was previously done [here](https://hackmd.io/OAJxlxc6Te6YUot9ftYSKQ), but all the important findings from both crater runs are reported below.

Below is a list of compatibility differences between BFD and LLD that we have encountered. There is a more thorough list of differences in [this post](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) from the current LLD maintainer. From that post, "99.9% pieces of software work with ld.lld without a change".

---

### `.ctors/.dtors` sections
[#128286](#128286) reported an issue where LLD was unable to link certain CUDA library was using these sections that were using the `.ctors/.dtors` ELF sections. These were deprecated a long time ago (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=46770), replaced with a more modern `.init_array/.fini_array` sections. LLD doesn't (and won't) support these sections ([1](llvm/llvm-project#68071), [2](llvm/llvm-project#30572)), so if they appear in input object files, the linked artifact might produce incorrect behavior, because e.g. some global variables might not get initialized properly.

However, the usage of `.ctors/.dtors` should be very rare in practice. We have performed a [crater run](#137044) to test this. It has identified only 8 crates where the `.ctors/.dtors` section is occurring in the final linked artifact. It was caused by a few crates using the `.ctors` link section manually, and by using a very (~6 year) old version of the [ctor](https://crates.io/crates/ctor) crate.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#ctorsdtors-sections)

**Possible workaround**
It is possible to [detect](e5e2316) if `.ctors/.dtors` section is present in the final linked artifact (LLD will keep it there, but it won't be populated), and warn users about it. This check is very cheap and doesn't even appear on [perf](#112049 (comment)). We have benchmarked the check on a 240 MiB Chrome binary, where it took 0.8ms with page cache flushed, and 0.06ms with page cache primed (which should be the common case, as the linked artifact is written to disk just before the check is performed).

In theory, this could be also solved with a linker script that moves `.ctors` to `.init_array`.

We think that these sections should be so rare that it is not worth it to implement any workarounds for now.

---

### Different garbage collection behavior
[#130397](#130397) reported an issue where LLD prunes a local symbol, so it is missing in the linked artifact. However, BFD keeps the same symbol, so it is a regression. This is caused by a difference in linker garbage collection.

Rust uses `--gc-sections` and puts each function into a separate linker section, which prunes unused code. There is some code (specifically the somewhat popular [linkme](https://github.com/dtolnay/linkme) crate) that (arguably ab-)uses so called linker encapsulation symbols to achieve distributed slices.

BFD (2.37+) uses a conservative linking mode that works as intended with this behavior, but it might slightly increase binary size of the linked artifact. LLD does not use this workaround by default, which causes the sections to be eliminated, but it can be made to use the conservative mode using [`-z nostart-stop-gc`](https://lld.llvm.org/ELF/start-stop-gc.html#z-start-stop-gc).

To avoid this issue, we told LLD to use the [conservative mode](#137685), which maintains backwards compatibility with BFD. We found that it has [no effect](#112049 (comment)) on compilation performance and binary size in our benchmark suite. With this change, `linkme` works. Since then, #140872 removed `linkme` distributed slice's dependence on conservative GC behavior, so this PR also removes that conservative mode: no transition period is necessary, as the PR immediately fixed the crate with no source changes.

[Crater run analysis](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Different-garbage-collection-behavior)

---

### Various uncommon issues

A small number of issues that only occurred in a handful of instances were found in crater, and it is unclear if LLD is at fault or if there is some other issue that was not detected with BFD.

You can examine these [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Various-uncommon-issues).

---

### Missing jobserver support
LLD doesn't support the jobserver protocol for limiting the number of threads used, it simply defaults to using all available cores, and is one of the reasons why it's faster than BFD. However, this should mostly be a non-issue, because most of the linking done during high parallelism sections of `cargo build` is linking of build scripts and proc macros, which are typically very fast to link (e.g. ~50ms), and a potential oversubscription of cores thus doesn't hurt that much.

When the final artifact is linked (which typically takes the most time), there should be no other sources of parallelism conflicts from compiling other code, so LLD should be able to use all available threads.

That being said, it is a difference of behavior, where previously a `-j` flag was generally not using more cpu than the specified limit. It can be impactful in some resource-constrained systems, but to be clear that is already the case today due to [cargo parallelism](rust-lang/cargo#9157). This could be one reason to opt out of using `rust-lld` on some systems.

LLD has support for limiting the number of threads to use, so in theory rustc could try to get all the jobserver tokens available and use that as lld's thread limit. It'd still be suboptimal as new tokens would not be dynamically detected, and we could be using less threads than available.

We did a benchmark on a real-world crate that shows that using multiple LLD threads for intermediate artifacts doesn't seem to have a performance effect. You can find it [here](https://hackmd.io/tFDifkUcSLGoHPBRIl0z8w?view#Missing-jobserver-support).

---

#### Opting out of LLD in the ecosystem
We have also examined repositories where people opted out of LLD on nightly, using [this GitHub query](https://github.com/search?q=%22linker-features%3D-lld%22&type=code). The summary can be found below:

<details>
<summary>Summary of LLD opt outs</summary>

> This examination was performed on 2025-03-09.

Here we briefly examine the most common reasons why people use `-Zlinker-features=-lld`, based on comments and git history.

- Nix/NixOS ([1](https://github.com/rszyma/vscode-kanata/blob/59d703dff5a238b14ab3759cac27f73fb34bbcfe/flake.nix#L33), [2](https://github.com/sbernauer/breakwater/blob/3cc3449fc126c5c99d4a971733fd32be589884e0/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [3](https://github.com/tiiuae/ebpf-firewall/blame/32bdb17cedd1c9bea1ab3482623de458d95da7d0/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [4](https://github.com/jules-sommer/wavetheme-gen/blob/f5f657d014d4a30607625afb70f810c229c0294e/Cargo.toml#L4), [5](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/zside-rust/blob/e4266f5c5571a1b180a9c70cf0939c7070e410c7/.cargo/config.toml#L10), [6](https://github.com/przyjacielpkp/zkml/blob/22a4aef24e9d2c77789229d7c634fc67e9eb1184/README.md?plain=1#L78), [7](https://github.com/LayerTwo-Labs/thunder-rust/blob/2222d53474c8d2d0428b4c56f8157095dced6d5a/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [8](https://github.com/enesoztrk/nixos-tc-aya-test/blob/b2ffa59d3eba8b60fd04b0a4c8bbe047400eb981/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [9](https://github.com/lowRISC/container-hotplug/blob/3ead4ef9c7f79c303392178c99677dbecff1aea6/.cargo/config.toml#L2), [10](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/lsp-client/src/extension.ts#L94))
    - There was an [issue](NixOS/nixpkgs#312661) with LLD, which seems to have been fixed with NixOS/nixpkgs#314268.
 It's unclear whether that fixed all the Nix issues though.
- Issues with linkme ([1](https://github.com/0xPolygonZero/zk_evm/blob/ef388619ffbd5305209519a3a5bc0396185d68ac/.cargo/config.toml#L4), [2](https://github.com/conjure-cp/conjure-oxide/blob/be0fc5827ff90e8486d416cc184b6ce24f73bf01/README.md?plain=1#L20), [3](https://github.com/clchiou/garage/blob/c5d8444d56bb6ee24ca95e5c6b9880ed996f4918/rust/.cargo/config.toml#L6), [4](https://github.com/PonasKovas/craftflow/blob/5b4cc1a5196e08a975368399fefda4b71f3a2f6f/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [5](https://github.com/kezhuw/zookeeper-client-rust/blob/4e27c7de2a7cc5e709af012b791c8fea9bb47f1f/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L82), [6](https://github.com/niklasdewally/conjure-oxide/blob/8fe60c12bca7011a2f9eded4b7c95ad0e77b6f44/.github/workflows/code-coverage.yml#L48), [7](https://github.com/kezhuw/spawns/blob/c8b468379805de9df3287c01b94b4ed3db6b61ed/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L74))
    - These should be resolved with the conservative garbage collection ([#137685](#137685)).
- Bazel ([1](https://github.com/google-parfait/confidential-federated-compute/blob/1823f69ed8f5f4f819f7bfa21da1ca629fdc826b/.bazelrc#L71)), WASM ([1](https://github.com/Eliah-Lakhin/ad-astra/blob/ca6b8c8a5dba7bb5e894f3f1013f17876962a021/work/examples/wasm-build.sh#L37), [2](https://github.com/yacineb/pgrx-wasi-test/blob/2bf99037ca1b650b2cbc35f1257a87fb6ead0920/build.sh#L21)), uncategorized ([2](https://github.com/nbdd0121/r2vm/blob/5118be6b9e757c6fef2f019385873f403c23c548/.cargo/config.toml#L3), [3](https://github.com/Wyvern/Img/blame/45020c7e1dc4926c8129647014c708db0c13f463/.cargo/config.toml#L209), [4](https://github.com/arnaudpoullet/leptos-i18n-compile-error/blob/042eb835f7ca0dc36be67cf7fe65b35b22b6059f/README.md?plain=1#L89), [5](https://github.com/JonLeeCon/numerical-rust-cpu/blob/fd0b3006768ed81c56147044dc05c92b11b7b6f0/exercises/.cargo/config.toml#L13), [6](https://github.com/PonasKovas/shallowclone/blob/be65f2ec923cac6ceedbc8db520c89969ebfce7c/.github/workflows/rust.yml#L20))
    - Reason unclear.
</details>

## History
The idea to use a faster linker by default has been on the radar for quite some time ([#39915](#39915), [#71515](#71515)). There were [very early attempts](#29974) to use the gold linker by default, but these had to be [reverted](#30913) because of compatibility issues. Support for LLD was implemented back in [2017](#40018), but it has not been made default yet, except for some more niche targets, such as [WASM](#48125), [ARM Cortex](#53648) or [RISC-V](#53822).

It took quite some time to figure out how should the interface for selecting the linker (and the way it is invoked) look like, as it differs a lot between different platforms, linkers and compiler drivers. During that time, LLD has matured and achieved [almost perfect compatibility](https://maskray.me/blog/2020-12-19-lld-and-gnu-linker-incompatibilities) with the default Linux linker (BFD).

- [#56351](#56351) stabilized `-Clinker-flavor`, which is used to determine how to invoke the linker. It is especially useful on targets where selecting the linker directly with `-Clinker` is not possible or is impractical.
    - December 2018, author `@davidtwco,` reviewer `@nagisa`
- [#76158](#76158) stabilized `-Clink-self-contained=[y|n]`, which allows overriding the compiler's heuristic for deciding whether it should use self-contained or external tools (linker, sanitizers, libc, etc.). It only allowed using the self-contained mode either for everything (`y`) or nothing (`n`), but did not allow granular choice.
    - September 2020, author `@mati864,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#85961](#85961) implemented the `-Zgcc-ld` flag, which was a hacky way of opting into LLD usage.
    - June 2021, author `@sledgehammervampire,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [MCP 510](rust-lang/compiler-team#510) proposed stabilizing the behavior of `-Zgcc-ld` using more granular flags (`-Clink-self-contained=linker -Clinker-flavor=gcc-lld`).
    - Initially implemented in [#96827](#96827), but `@petrochenkov` [suggested](#96827 (comment)) a slightly different approach.
    - The PR was split into [#96884](#96884), where it was decided what will be the individual components of `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - And [#96401](#96401), which implemented the `-Clinker-flavor` part.
    - The MCP was finally implemented in [#112910](#112910).
    - [#116514](#116514) then removed `-Zgcc-ld`, as it was replaced by `-Clinker-flavor=gnu-lld-cc` + `-Clink-self-contained=linker`.
    - April 2022 - October 2023, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`

- Various linker handling refactorings were performed in the meantime: [#97375](#97375), [#98212](#98212), [#100126](#100126), [#100552](#100552), [#102836](#102836), [#110807](#110807), [#101988](#101988), [#116515](#116515)

- The implementation of linker flavors with LLD was causing a sort of a combinatorial explosion of various options.
[#119906](#119906) suggested a different approach for linker flavors (described [here](#119906 (comment))), where the individual flavors could be enabled separately using `+/-` (e.g. `+lld`).
    - After some back and forth, this idea was moved to `-Clinker-features` (see [comment 1](#119906 (comment)) and [comment 2](#119906 (comment))), which was implemented in [#123656](#123656).
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#124129](#124129) enabled LLD by default on nightly.
    - April 2024, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov`
- [#137685](#137685), [#137926](#137926) enabled the conservative gargage collection mode (`-znostart-stop-gc`) to improve compatibility with BFD.
    - February 2025, author `@lqd,` reviewer `@petrochenkov` (implementation), author `@kobzol,` reviewer `@lqd` (test)
- [#96025](#96025) (April 2022), [#117684](#117684) (November 2023), [#137044](#137044) (February 2025): crater runs.

## Unresolved questions/concerns
- Is changing the linker considered a breaking change? In (hopefully very rare) cases, it might break some existing code. It should mostly only affect the final linked artifact, so it should be easy to opt out.
- Similarly, is the single-threaded behavior of such tools encompassed in our stability guarantee: it can be observed via the `-j` job limit (though I believe we have/had some open issues on sometimes using more CPU resources than the job count limit implied). As mentioned above, LLD does not support the jobserver protocol.
- A concern [was raised](#71515 (comment)) about increased memory usage of LLD. We should probably let users know about the possibly increased memory usage, and jobserver incompatibility: we did so when announcing this landing on nightly.
- LLD seems to produce [slightly larger](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=b3e117044c7f707293edc040edb93e7ec5f7040a&end=baed03c51a68376c1789cc373581eea0daf89967&stat=size%3Alinked_artifact&tab=compile) binary artifacts. This can be partially clawed back using Identical Code Folding (`-Clink-args=-Wl,--icf=all`).
- Should we detect the outdated `.ctors/.dtors` sections to provide a better error message, even if that should be rare in practice?

---

### Next steps

After the FCP completes:
- we should land this PR at the beginning of a beta cycle, to maximize time for testing
- keep an eye on the beta crater run results for possible linker issues (or do a dedicated beta crater run with only this change)
- release a blog post announcing the change, and asking for testing feedback of the appropriate beta
- depending on feedback, or if a period of testing of 6 weeks is not long enough, we could keep this change on beta for another cycle

---

Development, testing, try builds were done in #138645.

r? `@petrochenkov`
`@rustbot` label +needs-fcp +T-compiler
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