SPNU118Z September 1995 – March 2023 66AK2E05 , 66AK2H06 , 66AK2H12 , 66AK2H14 , AM1705 , AM1707 , AM1802 , AM1806 , AM1808 , AM1810 , AM5K2E04 , OMAP-L132 , OMAP-L137 , OMAP-L138 , SM470R1B1M-HT , TMS470R1A288 , TMS470R1A384 , TMS470R1A64 , TMS470R1B1M , TMS470R1B512 , TMS470R1B768
If you have several pieces of code that need to be managed together, then you can apply the same table() operator to several different object components. In addition, if you want to manage a particular object component in multiple ways, you can apply more than one table() operator to it. Consider the linker command file excerpt in Linker Command File to Manage Object Components:
SECTIONS
{
UNION
{
.first: { a1.c.obj(.text), b1.c.obj(.text), c1.c.obj(.text) }
load = EMEM, run = PMEM, table(BINIT), table(_first_ctbl)
.second: { a2.c.obj(.text), b2.c.obj(.text) }
load = EMEM, run = PMEM, table(_second_ctbl)
}
.extra: load = EMEM, run = PMEM, table(BINIT)
...
}
In this example, the output sections .first and .extra are copied from external memory (EMEM) into program memory (PMEM) at boot time while processing the BINIT copy table. After the application has started executing its main thread, it can then manage the contents of the overlay using the two overlay copy tables named: _first_ctbl and _second_ctbl.