freebsd-dev/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c

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/*-
* Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 John D. Polstra.
* Copyright 2003 Alexander Kabaev <kan@FreeBSD.ORG>.
* Copyright 2009-2012 Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.ORG>.
* Copyright 2012 John Marino <draco@marino.st>.
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
1999-08-28 00:22:10 +00:00
* $FreeBSD$
*/
/*
* Dynamic linker for ELF.
*
* John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>.
*/
#ifndef __GNUC__
#error "GCC is needed to compile this file"
#endif
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <sys/utsname.h>
#include <sys/ktrace.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include "debug.h"
#include "rtld.h"
#include "libmap.h"
2004-08-03 08:51:00 +00:00
#include "rtld_tls.h"
#include "rtld_printf.h"
#include "notes.h"
#ifndef COMPAT_32BIT
#define PATH_RTLD "/libexec/ld-elf.so.1"
#else
#define PATH_RTLD "/libexec/ld-elf32.so.1"
#endif
/* Types. */
typedef void (*func_ptr_type)();
typedef void * (*path_enum_proc) (const char *path, size_t len, void *arg);
/*
* Function declarations.
*/
static const char *basename(const char *);
static void die(void) __dead2;
static void digest_dynamic1(Obj_Entry *, int, const Elf_Dyn **,
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
const Elf_Dyn **, const Elf_Dyn **);
static void digest_dynamic2(Obj_Entry *, const Elf_Dyn *, const Elf_Dyn *,
const Elf_Dyn *);
static void digest_dynamic(Obj_Entry *, int);
static Obj_Entry *digest_phdr(const Elf_Phdr *, int, caddr_t, const char *);
static Obj_Entry *dlcheck(void *);
static Obj_Entry *dlopen_object(const char *name, int fd, Obj_Entry *refobj,
int lo_flags, int mode, RtldLockState *lockstate);
static Obj_Entry *do_load_object(int, const char *, char *, struct stat *, int);
static int do_search_info(const Obj_Entry *obj, int, struct dl_serinfo *);
static bool donelist_check(DoneList *, const Obj_Entry *);
static void errmsg_restore(char *);
static char *errmsg_save(void);
static void *fill_search_info(const char *, size_t, void *);
static char *find_library(const char *, const Obj_Entry *);
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
static const char *gethints(bool);
static void init_dag(Obj_Entry *);
static void init_rtld(caddr_t, Elf_Auxinfo **);
static void initlist_add_neededs(Needed_Entry *, Objlist *);
static void initlist_add_objects(Obj_Entry *, Obj_Entry **, Objlist *);
static void linkmap_add(Obj_Entry *);
static void linkmap_delete(Obj_Entry *);
static void load_filtees(Obj_Entry *, int flags, RtldLockState *);
static void unload_filtees(Obj_Entry *);
static int load_needed_objects(Obj_Entry *, int);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
static int load_preload_objects(void);
static Obj_Entry *load_object(const char *, int fd, const Obj_Entry *, int);
static void map_stacks_exec(RtldLockState *);
static Obj_Entry *obj_from_addr(const void *);
static void objlist_call_fini(Objlist *, Obj_Entry *, RtldLockState *);
static void objlist_call_init(Objlist *, RtldLockState *);
static void objlist_clear(Objlist *);
static Objlist_Entry *objlist_find(Objlist *, const Obj_Entry *);
static void objlist_init(Objlist *);
static void objlist_push_head(Objlist *, Obj_Entry *);
static void objlist_push_tail(Objlist *, Obj_Entry *);
static void objlist_remove(Objlist *, Obj_Entry *);
static void *path_enumerate(const char *, path_enum_proc, void *);
static int relocate_object_dag(Obj_Entry *root, bool bind_now,
Obj_Entry *rtldobj, int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate);
static int relocate_object(Obj_Entry *obj, bool bind_now, Obj_Entry *rtldobj,
int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate);
static int relocate_objects(Obj_Entry *, bool, Obj_Entry *, int,
RtldLockState *);
static int resolve_objects_ifunc(Obj_Entry *first, bool bind_now,
int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate);
static int rtld_dirname(const char *, char *);
static int rtld_dirname_abs(const char *, char *);
static void *rtld_dlopen(const char *name, int fd, int mode);
static void rtld_exit(void);
static char *search_library_path(const char *, const char *);
static const void **get_program_var_addr(const char *, RtldLockState *);
static void set_program_var(const char *, const void *);
static int symlook_default(SymLook *, const Obj_Entry *refobj);
static int symlook_global(SymLook *, DoneList *);
static void symlook_init_from_req(SymLook *, const SymLook *);
static int symlook_list(SymLook *, const Objlist *, DoneList *);
static int symlook_needed(SymLook *, const Needed_Entry *, DoneList *);
static int symlook_obj1_sysv(SymLook *, const Obj_Entry *);
static int symlook_obj1_gnu(SymLook *, const Obj_Entry *);
static void trace_loaded_objects(Obj_Entry *);
static void unlink_object(Obj_Entry *);
static void unload_object(Obj_Entry *);
static void unref_dag(Obj_Entry *);
static void ref_dag(Obj_Entry *);
static char *origin_subst_one(char *, const char *, const char *, bool);
static char *origin_subst(char *, const char *);
static void preinit_main(void);
static int rtld_verify_versions(const Objlist *);
static int rtld_verify_object_versions(Obj_Entry *);
static void object_add_name(Obj_Entry *, const char *);
static int object_match_name(const Obj_Entry *, const char *);
static void ld_utrace_log(int, void *, void *, size_t, int, const char *);
static void rtld_fill_dl_phdr_info(const Obj_Entry *obj,
struct dl_phdr_info *phdr_info);
static uint32_t gnu_hash(const char *);
static bool matched_symbol(SymLook *, const Obj_Entry *, Sym_Match_Result *,
const unsigned long);
void r_debug_state(struct r_debug *, struct link_map *) __noinline;
/*
* Data declarations.
*/
static char *error_message; /* Message for dlerror(), or NULL */
struct r_debug r_debug; /* for GDB; */
static bool libmap_disable; /* Disable libmap */
static bool ld_loadfltr; /* Immediate filters processing */
static char *libmap_override; /* Maps to use in addition to libmap.conf */
static bool trust; /* False for setuid and setgid programs */
static bool dangerous_ld_env; /* True if environment variables have been
used to affect the libraries loaded */
static char *ld_bind_now; /* Environment variable for immediate binding */
static char *ld_debug; /* Environment variable for debugging */
static char *ld_library_path; /* Environment variable for search path */
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
static char *ld_preload; /* Environment variable for libraries to
load first */
static char *ld_elf_hints_path; /* Environment variable for alternative hints path */
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
static char *ld_tracing; /* Called from ldd to print libs */
static char *ld_utrace; /* Use utrace() to log events. */
static Obj_Entry *obj_list; /* Head of linked list of shared objects */
static Obj_Entry **obj_tail; /* Link field of last object in list */
static Obj_Entry *obj_main; /* The main program shared object */
static Obj_Entry obj_rtld; /* The dynamic linker shared object */
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
static unsigned int obj_count; /* Number of objects in obj_list */
static unsigned int obj_loads; /* Number of objects in obj_list */
static Objlist list_global = /* Objects dlopened with RTLD_GLOBAL */
STAILQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(list_global);
static Objlist list_main = /* Objects loaded at program startup */
STAILQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(list_main);
static Objlist list_fini = /* Objects needing fini() calls */
STAILQ_HEAD_INITIALIZER(list_fini);
Elf_Sym sym_zero; /* For resolving undefined weak refs. */
#define GDB_STATE(s,m) r_debug.r_state = s; r_debug_state(&r_debug,m);
extern Elf_Dyn _DYNAMIC;
#pragma weak _DYNAMIC
#ifndef RTLD_IS_DYNAMIC
#define RTLD_IS_DYNAMIC() (&_DYNAMIC != NULL)
#endif
int osreldate, pagesize;
long __stack_chk_guard[8] = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0};
static int stack_prot = PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE | RTLD_DEFAULT_STACK_EXEC;
static int max_stack_flags;
/*
* Global declarations normally provided by crt1. The dynamic linker is
* not built with crt1, so we have to provide them ourselves.
*/
char *__progname;
char **environ;
/*
* Used to pass argc, argv to init functions.
*/
int main_argc;
char **main_argv;
2004-08-03 08:51:00 +00:00
/*
* Globals to control TLS allocation.
*/
size_t tls_last_offset; /* Static TLS offset of last module */
size_t tls_last_size; /* Static TLS size of last module */
size_t tls_static_space; /* Static TLS space allocated */
int tls_dtv_generation = 1; /* Used to detect when dtv size changes */
int tls_max_index = 1; /* Largest module index allocated */
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
bool ld_library_path_rpath = false;
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
/*
* Fill in a DoneList with an allocation large enough to hold all of
* the currently-loaded objects. Keep this as a macro since it calls
* alloca and we want that to occur within the scope of the caller.
*/
#define donelist_init(dlp) \
((dlp)->objs = alloca(obj_count * sizeof (dlp)->objs[0]), \
assert((dlp)->objs != NULL), \
(dlp)->num_alloc = obj_count, \
(dlp)->num_used = 0)
#define UTRACE_DLOPEN_START 1
#define UTRACE_DLOPEN_STOP 2
#define UTRACE_DLCLOSE_START 3
#define UTRACE_DLCLOSE_STOP 4
#define UTRACE_LOAD_OBJECT 5
#define UTRACE_UNLOAD_OBJECT 6
#define UTRACE_ADD_RUNDEP 7
#define UTRACE_PRELOAD_FINISHED 8
#define UTRACE_INIT_CALL 9
#define UTRACE_FINI_CALL 10
struct utrace_rtld {
char sig[4]; /* 'RTLD' */
int event;
void *handle;
void *mapbase; /* Used for 'parent' and 'init/fini' */
size_t mapsize;
int refcnt; /* Used for 'mode' */
char name[MAXPATHLEN];
};
#define LD_UTRACE(e, h, mb, ms, r, n) do { \
if (ld_utrace != NULL) \
ld_utrace_log(e, h, mb, ms, r, n); \
} while (0)
static void
ld_utrace_log(int event, void *handle, void *mapbase, size_t mapsize,
int refcnt, const char *name)
{
struct utrace_rtld ut;
ut.sig[0] = 'R';
ut.sig[1] = 'T';
ut.sig[2] = 'L';
ut.sig[3] = 'D';
ut.event = event;
ut.handle = handle;
ut.mapbase = mapbase;
ut.mapsize = mapsize;
ut.refcnt = refcnt;
bzero(ut.name, sizeof(ut.name));
if (name)
strlcpy(ut.name, name, sizeof(ut.name));
utrace(&ut, sizeof(ut));
}
/*
* Main entry point for dynamic linking. The first argument is the
* stack pointer. The stack is expected to be laid out as described
* in the SVR4 ABI specification, Intel 386 Processor Supplement.
* Specifically, the stack pointer points to a word containing
* ARGC. Following that in the stack is a null-terminated sequence
* of pointers to argument strings. Then comes a null-terminated
* sequence of pointers to environment strings. Finally, there is a
* sequence of "auxiliary vector" entries.
*
* The second argument points to a place to store the dynamic linker's
* exit procedure pointer and the third to a place to store the main
* program's object.
*
* The return value is the main program's entry point.
*/
func_ptr_type
_rtld(Elf_Addr *sp, func_ptr_type *exit_proc, Obj_Entry **objp)
{
Elf_Auxinfo *aux_info[AT_COUNT];
int i;
int argc;
char **argv;
char **env;
Elf_Auxinfo *aux;
Elf_Auxinfo *auxp;
const char *argv0;
2004-08-03 08:51:00 +00:00
Objlist_Entry *entry;
Obj_Entry *obj;
Obj_Entry **preload_tail;
Objlist initlist;
RtldLockState lockstate;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
char *library_path_rpath;
int mib[2];
size_t len;
/*
* On entry, the dynamic linker itself has not been relocated yet.
* Be very careful not to reference any global data until after
* init_rtld has returned. It is OK to reference file-scope statics
* and string constants, and to call static and global functions.
*/
/* Find the auxiliary vector on the stack. */
argc = *sp++;
argv = (char **) sp;
sp += argc + 1; /* Skip over arguments and NULL terminator */
env = (char **) sp;
while (*sp++ != 0) /* Skip over environment, and NULL terminator */
;
aux = (Elf_Auxinfo *) sp;
/* Digest the auxiliary vector. */
for (i = 0; i < AT_COUNT; i++)
aux_info[i] = NULL;
for (auxp = aux; auxp->a_type != AT_NULL; auxp++) {
if (auxp->a_type < AT_COUNT)
aux_info[auxp->a_type] = auxp;
}
/* Initialize and relocate ourselves. */
assert(aux_info[AT_BASE] != NULL);
init_rtld((caddr_t) aux_info[AT_BASE]->a_un.a_ptr, aux_info);
__progname = obj_rtld.path;
argv0 = argv[0] != NULL ? argv[0] : "(null)";
environ = env;
main_argc = argc;
main_argv = argv;
if (aux_info[AT_CANARY] != NULL &&
aux_info[AT_CANARY]->a_un.a_ptr != NULL) {
i = aux_info[AT_CANARYLEN]->a_un.a_val;
if (i > sizeof(__stack_chk_guard))
i = sizeof(__stack_chk_guard);
memcpy(__stack_chk_guard, aux_info[AT_CANARY]->a_un.a_ptr, i);
} else {
mib[0] = CTL_KERN;
mib[1] = KERN_ARND;
len = sizeof(__stack_chk_guard);
if (sysctl(mib, 2, __stack_chk_guard, &len, NULL, 0) == -1 ||
len != sizeof(__stack_chk_guard)) {
/* If sysctl was unsuccessful, use the "terminator canary". */
((unsigned char *)(void *)__stack_chk_guard)[0] = 0;
((unsigned char *)(void *)__stack_chk_guard)[1] = 0;
((unsigned char *)(void *)__stack_chk_guard)[2] = '\n';
((unsigned char *)(void *)__stack_chk_guard)[3] = 255;
}
}
trust = !issetugid();
ld_bind_now = getenv(LD_ "BIND_NOW");
/*
* If the process is tainted, then we un-set the dangerous environment
* variables. The process will be marked as tainted until setuid(2)
* is called. If any child process calls setuid(2) we do not want any
* future processes to honor the potentially un-safe variables.
*/
if (!trust) {
if (unsetenv(LD_ "PRELOAD") || unsetenv(LD_ "LIBMAP") ||
unsetenv(LD_ "LIBRARY_PATH") || unsetenv(LD_ "LIBMAP_DISABLE") ||
unsetenv(LD_ "DEBUG") || unsetenv(LD_ "ELF_HINTS_PATH") ||
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
unsetenv(LD_ "LOADFLTR") || unsetenv(LD_ "LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH")) {
_rtld_error("environment corrupt; aborting");
die();
}
}
ld_debug = getenv(LD_ "DEBUG");
libmap_disable = getenv(LD_ "LIBMAP_DISABLE") != NULL;
libmap_override = getenv(LD_ "LIBMAP");
ld_library_path = getenv(LD_ "LIBRARY_PATH");
ld_preload = getenv(LD_ "PRELOAD");
ld_elf_hints_path = getenv(LD_ "ELF_HINTS_PATH");
ld_loadfltr = getenv(LD_ "LOADFLTR") != NULL;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
library_path_rpath = getenv(LD_ "LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH");
if (library_path_rpath != NULL) {
if (library_path_rpath[0] == 'y' ||
library_path_rpath[0] == 'Y' ||
library_path_rpath[0] == '1')
ld_library_path_rpath = true;
else
ld_library_path_rpath = false;
}
dangerous_ld_env = libmap_disable || (libmap_override != NULL) ||
(ld_library_path != NULL) || (ld_preload != NULL) ||
(ld_elf_hints_path != NULL) || ld_loadfltr;
ld_tracing = getenv(LD_ "TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS");
ld_utrace = getenv(LD_ "UTRACE");
if ((ld_elf_hints_path == NULL) || strlen(ld_elf_hints_path) == 0)
ld_elf_hints_path = _PATH_ELF_HINTS;
if (ld_debug != NULL && *ld_debug != '\0')
debug = 1;
dbg("%s is initialized, base address = %p", __progname,
(caddr_t) aux_info[AT_BASE]->a_un.a_ptr);
dbg("RTLD dynamic = %p", obj_rtld.dynamic);
dbg("RTLD pltgot = %p", obj_rtld.pltgot);
dbg("initializing thread locks");
lockdflt_init();
/*
* Load the main program, or process its program header if it is
* already loaded.
*/
if (aux_info[AT_EXECFD] != NULL) { /* Load the main program. */
int fd = aux_info[AT_EXECFD]->a_un.a_val;
dbg("loading main program");
obj_main = map_object(fd, argv0, NULL);
close(fd);
if (obj_main == NULL)
die();
max_stack_flags = obj->stack_flags;
} else { /* Main program already loaded. */
const Elf_Phdr *phdr;
int phnum;
caddr_t entry;
dbg("processing main program's program header");
assert(aux_info[AT_PHDR] != NULL);
phdr = (const Elf_Phdr *) aux_info[AT_PHDR]->a_un.a_ptr;
assert(aux_info[AT_PHNUM] != NULL);
phnum = aux_info[AT_PHNUM]->a_un.a_val;
assert(aux_info[AT_PHENT] != NULL);
assert(aux_info[AT_PHENT]->a_un.a_val == sizeof(Elf_Phdr));
assert(aux_info[AT_ENTRY] != NULL);
entry = (caddr_t) aux_info[AT_ENTRY]->a_un.a_ptr;
if ((obj_main = digest_phdr(phdr, phnum, entry, argv0)) == NULL)
die();
}
if (aux_info[AT_EXECPATH] != 0) {
char *kexecpath;
char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
kexecpath = aux_info[AT_EXECPATH]->a_un.a_ptr;
dbg("AT_EXECPATH %p %s", kexecpath, kexecpath);
if (kexecpath[0] == '/')
obj_main->path = kexecpath;
else if (getcwd(buf, sizeof(buf)) == NULL ||
strlcat(buf, "/", sizeof(buf)) >= sizeof(buf) ||
strlcat(buf, kexecpath, sizeof(buf)) >= sizeof(buf))
obj_main->path = xstrdup(argv0);
else
obj_main->path = xstrdup(buf);
} else {
dbg("No AT_EXECPATH");
obj_main->path = xstrdup(argv0);
}
dbg("obj_main path %s", obj_main->path);
obj_main->mainprog = true;
if (aux_info[AT_STACKPROT] != NULL &&
aux_info[AT_STACKPROT]->a_un.a_val != 0)
stack_prot = aux_info[AT_STACKPROT]->a_un.a_val;
/*
* Get the actual dynamic linker pathname from the executable if
* possible. (It should always be possible.) That ensures that
* gdb will find the right dynamic linker even if a non-standard
* one is being used.
*/
if (obj_main->interp != NULL &&
strcmp(obj_main->interp, obj_rtld.path) != 0) {
free(obj_rtld.path);
obj_rtld.path = xstrdup(obj_main->interp);
__progname = obj_rtld.path;
}
digest_dynamic(obj_main, 0);
dbg("%s valid_hash_sysv %d valid_hash_gnu %d dynsymcount %d",
obj_main->path, obj_main->valid_hash_sysv, obj_main->valid_hash_gnu,
obj_main->dynsymcount);
linkmap_add(obj_main);
linkmap_add(&obj_rtld);
/* Link the main program into the list of objects. */
*obj_tail = obj_main;
obj_tail = &obj_main->next;
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
obj_count++;
obj_loads++;
/* Initialize a fake symbol for resolving undefined weak references. */
sym_zero.st_info = ELF_ST_INFO(STB_GLOBAL, STT_NOTYPE);
sym_zero.st_shndx = SHN_UNDEF;
sym_zero.st_value = -(uintptr_t)obj_main->relocbase;
if (!libmap_disable)
libmap_disable = (bool)lm_init(libmap_override);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
dbg("loading LD_PRELOAD libraries");
if (load_preload_objects() == -1)
die();
preload_tail = obj_tail;
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
dbg("loading needed objects");
if (load_needed_objects(obj_main, 0) == -1)
die();
/* Make a list of all objects loaded at startup. */
for (obj = obj_list; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
objlist_push_tail(&list_main, obj);
obj->refcount++;
}
dbg("checking for required versions");
if (rtld_verify_versions(&list_main) == -1 && !ld_tracing)
die();
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
if (ld_tracing) { /* We're done */
trace_loaded_objects(obj_main);
exit(0);
}
if (getenv(LD_ "DUMP_REL_PRE") != NULL) {
dump_relocations(obj_main);
exit (0);
}
/*
* Processing tls relocations requires having the tls offsets
* initialized. Prepare offsets before starting initial
* relocation processing.
*/
dbg("initializing initial thread local storage offsets");
STAILQ_FOREACH(entry, &list_main, link) {
/*
* Allocate all the initial objects out of the static TLS
* block even if they didn't ask for it.
*/
allocate_tls_offset(entry->obj);
}
if (relocate_objects(obj_main,
ld_bind_now != NULL && *ld_bind_now != '\0',
&obj_rtld, SYMLOOK_EARLY, NULL) == -1)
die();
dbg("doing copy relocations");
if (do_copy_relocations(obj_main) == -1)
die();
if (getenv(LD_ "DUMP_REL_POST") != NULL) {
dump_relocations(obj_main);
exit (0);
}
/*
* Setup TLS for main thread. This must be done after the
* relocations are processed, since tls initialization section
* might be the subject for relocations.
*/
dbg("initializing initial thread local storage");
allocate_initial_tls(obj_list);
dbg("initializing key program variables");
set_program_var("__progname", argv[0] != NULL ? basename(argv[0]) : "");
set_program_var("environ", env);
set_program_var("__elf_aux_vector", aux);
/* Make a list of init functions to call. */
objlist_init(&initlist);
initlist_add_objects(obj_list, preload_tail, &initlist);
r_debug_state(NULL, &obj_main->linkmap); /* say hello to gdb! */
map_stacks_exec(NULL);
dbg("resolving ifuncs");
if (resolve_objects_ifunc(obj_main,
ld_bind_now != NULL && *ld_bind_now != '\0', SYMLOOK_EARLY,
NULL) == -1)
die();
if (!obj_main->crt_no_init) {
/*
* Make sure we don't call the main program's init and fini
* functions for binaries linked with old crt1 which calls
* _init itself.
*/
obj_main->init = obj_main->fini = (Elf_Addr)NULL;
obj_main->preinit_array = obj_main->init_array =
obj_main->fini_array = (Elf_Addr)NULL;
}
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (obj_main->crt_no_init)
preinit_main();
objlist_call_init(&initlist, &lockstate);
objlist_clear(&initlist);
dbg("loading filtees");
for (obj = obj_list->next; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
if (ld_loadfltr || obj->z_loadfltr)
load_filtees(obj, 0, &lockstate);
}
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
dbg("transferring control to program entry point = %p", obj_main->entry);
/* Return the exit procedure and the program entry point. */
*exit_proc = rtld_exit;
*objp = obj_main;
return (func_ptr_type) obj_main->entry;
}
void *
rtld_resolve_ifunc(const Obj_Entry *obj, const Elf_Sym *def)
{
void *ptr;
Elf_Addr target;
ptr = (void *)make_function_pointer(def, obj);
target = ((Elf_Addr (*)(void))ptr)();
return ((void *)target);
}
Elf_Addr
_rtld_bind(Obj_Entry *obj, Elf_Size reloff)
{
const Elf_Rel *rel;
const Elf_Sym *def;
const Obj_Entry *defobj;
Elf_Addr *where;
Elf_Addr target;
RtldLockState lockstate;
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (sigsetjmp(lockstate.env, 0) != 0)
lock_upgrade(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (obj->pltrel)
rel = (const Elf_Rel *) ((caddr_t) obj->pltrel + reloff);
else
rel = (const Elf_Rel *) ((caddr_t) obj->pltrela + reloff);
where = (Elf_Addr *) (obj->relocbase + rel->r_offset);
def = find_symdef(ELF_R_SYM(rel->r_info), obj, &defobj, true, NULL,
&lockstate);
if (def == NULL)
die();
if (ELF_ST_TYPE(def->st_info) == STT_GNU_IFUNC)
target = (Elf_Addr)rtld_resolve_ifunc(defobj, def);
else
target = (Elf_Addr)(defobj->relocbase + def->st_value);
dbg("\"%s\" in \"%s\" ==> %p in \"%s\"",
defobj->strtab + def->st_name, basename(obj->path),
(void *)target, basename(defobj->path));
/*
* Write the new contents for the jmpslot. Note that depending on
* architecture, the value which we need to return back to the
* lazy binding trampoline may or may not be the target
* address. The value returned from reloc_jmpslot() is the value
* that the trampoline needs.
*/
target = reloc_jmpslot(where, target, defobj, obj, rel);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return target;
}
/*
* Error reporting function. Use it like printf. If formats the message
* into a buffer, and sets things up so that the next call to dlerror()
* will return the message.
*/
void
_rtld_error(const char *fmt, ...)
{
static char buf[512];
va_list ap;
va_start(ap, fmt);
rtld_vsnprintf(buf, sizeof buf, fmt, ap);
error_message = buf;
va_end(ap);
}
/*
* Return a dynamically-allocated copy of the current error message, if any.
*/
static char *
errmsg_save(void)
{
return error_message == NULL ? NULL : xstrdup(error_message);
}
/*
* Restore the current error message from a copy which was previously saved
* by errmsg_save(). The copy is freed.
*/
static void
errmsg_restore(char *saved_msg)
{
if (saved_msg == NULL)
error_message = NULL;
else {
_rtld_error("%s", saved_msg);
free(saved_msg);
}
}
static const char *
basename(const char *name)
{
const char *p = strrchr(name, '/');
return p != NULL ? p + 1 : name;
}
static struct utsname uts;
static char *
origin_subst_one(char *real, const char *kw, const char *subst,
bool may_free)
{
char *p, *p1, *res, *resp;
int subst_len, kw_len, subst_count, old_len, new_len;
kw_len = strlen(kw);
/*
* First, count the number of the keyword occurences, to
* preallocate the final string.
*/
for (p = real, subst_count = 0;; p = p1 + kw_len, subst_count++) {
p1 = strstr(p, kw);
if (p1 == NULL)
break;
}
/*
* If the keyword is not found, just return.
*/
if (subst_count == 0)
return (may_free ? real : xstrdup(real));
/*
* There is indeed something to substitute. Calculate the
* length of the resulting string, and allocate it.
*/
subst_len = strlen(subst);
old_len = strlen(real);
new_len = old_len + (subst_len - kw_len) * subst_count;
res = xmalloc(new_len + 1);
/*
* Now, execute the substitution loop.
*/
for (p = real, resp = res, *resp = '\0';;) {
p1 = strstr(p, kw);
if (p1 != NULL) {
/* Copy the prefix before keyword. */
memcpy(resp, p, p1 - p);
resp += p1 - p;
/* Keyword replacement. */
memcpy(resp, subst, subst_len);
resp += subst_len;
*resp = '\0';
p = p1 + kw_len;
} else
break;
}
/* Copy to the end of string and finish. */
strcat(resp, p);
if (may_free)
free(real);
return (res);
}
static char *
origin_subst(char *real, const char *origin_path)
{
char *res1, *res2, *res3, *res4;
if (uts.sysname[0] == '\0') {
if (uname(&uts) != 0) {
_rtld_error("utsname failed: %d", errno);
return (NULL);
}
}
res1 = origin_subst_one(real, "$ORIGIN", origin_path, false);
res2 = origin_subst_one(res1, "$OSNAME", uts.sysname, true);
res3 = origin_subst_one(res2, "$OSREL", uts.release, true);
res4 = origin_subst_one(res3, "$PLATFORM", uts.machine, true);
return (res4);
}
static void
die(void)
{
const char *msg = dlerror();
if (msg == NULL)
msg = "Fatal error";
rtld_fdputstr(STDERR_FILENO, msg);
rtld_fdputchar(STDERR_FILENO, '\n');
_exit(1);
}
/*
* Process a shared object's DYNAMIC section, and save the important
* information in its Obj_Entry structure.
*/
static void
digest_dynamic1(Obj_Entry *obj, int early, const Elf_Dyn **dyn_rpath,
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
const Elf_Dyn **dyn_soname, const Elf_Dyn **dyn_runpath)
{
const Elf_Dyn *dynp;
Needed_Entry **needed_tail = &obj->needed;
Needed_Entry **needed_filtees_tail = &obj->needed_filtees;
Needed_Entry **needed_aux_filtees_tail = &obj->needed_aux_filtees;
const Elf_Hashelt *hashtab;
const Elf32_Word *hashval;
Elf32_Word bkt, nmaskwords;
int bloom_size32;
bool nmw_power2;
int plttype = DT_REL;
*dyn_rpath = NULL;
*dyn_soname = NULL;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
*dyn_runpath = NULL;
obj->bind_now = false;
for (dynp = obj->dynamic; dynp->d_tag != DT_NULL; dynp++) {
switch (dynp->d_tag) {
case DT_REL:
obj->rel = (const Elf_Rel *) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_RELSZ:
obj->relsize = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_RELENT:
assert(dynp->d_un.d_val == sizeof(Elf_Rel));
break;
case DT_JMPREL:
obj->pltrel = (const Elf_Rel *)
(obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_PLTRELSZ:
obj->pltrelsize = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_RELA:
obj->rela = (const Elf_Rela *) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_RELASZ:
obj->relasize = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_RELAENT:
assert(dynp->d_un.d_val == sizeof(Elf_Rela));
break;
case DT_PLTREL:
plttype = dynp->d_un.d_val;
assert(dynp->d_un.d_val == DT_REL || plttype == DT_RELA);
break;
case DT_SYMTAB:
obj->symtab = (const Elf_Sym *)
(obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_SYMENT:
assert(dynp->d_un.d_val == sizeof(Elf_Sym));
break;
case DT_STRTAB:
obj->strtab = (const char *) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_STRSZ:
obj->strsize = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_VERNEED:
obj->verneed = (const Elf_Verneed *) (obj->relocbase +
dynp->d_un.d_val);
break;
case DT_VERNEEDNUM:
obj->verneednum = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_VERDEF:
obj->verdef = (const Elf_Verdef *) (obj->relocbase +
dynp->d_un.d_val);
break;
case DT_VERDEFNUM:
obj->verdefnum = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_VERSYM:
obj->versyms = (const Elf_Versym *)(obj->relocbase +
dynp->d_un.d_val);
break;
case DT_HASH:
{
hashtab = (const Elf_Hashelt *)(obj->relocbase +
dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
obj->nbuckets = hashtab[0];
obj->nchains = hashtab[1];
obj->buckets = hashtab + 2;
obj->chains = obj->buckets + obj->nbuckets;
obj->valid_hash_sysv = obj->nbuckets > 0 && obj->nchains > 0 &&
obj->buckets != NULL;
}
break;
case DT_GNU_HASH:
{
hashtab = (const Elf_Hashelt *)(obj->relocbase +
dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
obj->nbuckets_gnu = hashtab[0];
obj->symndx_gnu = hashtab[1];
nmaskwords = hashtab[2];
bloom_size32 = (__ELF_WORD_SIZE / 32) * nmaskwords;
/* Number of bitmask words is required to be power of 2 */
nmw_power2 = ((nmaskwords & (nmaskwords - 1)) == 0);
obj->maskwords_bm_gnu = nmaskwords - 1;
obj->shift2_gnu = hashtab[3];
obj->bloom_gnu = (Elf_Addr *) (hashtab + 4);
obj->buckets_gnu = hashtab + 4 + bloom_size32;
obj->chain_zero_gnu = obj->buckets_gnu + obj->nbuckets_gnu -
obj->symndx_gnu;
obj->valid_hash_gnu = nmw_power2 && obj->nbuckets_gnu > 0 &&
obj->buckets_gnu != NULL;
}
break;
case DT_NEEDED:
if (!obj->rtld) {
Needed_Entry *nep = NEW(Needed_Entry);
nep->name = dynp->d_un.d_val;
nep->obj = NULL;
nep->next = NULL;
*needed_tail = nep;
needed_tail = &nep->next;
}
break;
case DT_FILTER:
if (!obj->rtld) {
Needed_Entry *nep = NEW(Needed_Entry);
nep->name = dynp->d_un.d_val;
nep->obj = NULL;
nep->next = NULL;
*needed_filtees_tail = nep;
needed_filtees_tail = &nep->next;
}
break;
case DT_AUXILIARY:
if (!obj->rtld) {
Needed_Entry *nep = NEW(Needed_Entry);
nep->name = dynp->d_un.d_val;
nep->obj = NULL;
nep->next = NULL;
*needed_aux_filtees_tail = nep;
needed_aux_filtees_tail = &nep->next;
}
break;
case DT_PLTGOT:
obj->pltgot = (Elf_Addr *) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_TEXTREL:
obj->textrel = true;
break;
case DT_SYMBOLIC:
obj->symbolic = true;
break;
case DT_RPATH:
/*
* We have to wait until later to process this, because we
* might not have gotten the address of the string table yet.
*/
*dyn_rpath = dynp;
break;
case DT_SONAME:
*dyn_soname = dynp;
break;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
case DT_RUNPATH:
*dyn_runpath = dynp;
break;
case DT_INIT:
obj->init = (Elf_Addr) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_PREINIT_ARRAY:
obj->preinit_array = (Elf_Addr)(obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_PREINIT_ARRAYSZ:
obj->preinit_array_num = dynp->d_un.d_val / sizeof(Elf_Addr);
break;
case DT_INIT_ARRAY:
obj->init_array = (Elf_Addr)(obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_INIT_ARRAYSZ:
obj->init_array_num = dynp->d_un.d_val / sizeof(Elf_Addr);
break;
case DT_FINI:
obj->fini = (Elf_Addr) (obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_FINI_ARRAY:
obj->fini_array = (Elf_Addr)(obj->relocbase + dynp->d_un.d_ptr);
break;
case DT_FINI_ARRAYSZ:
obj->fini_array_num = dynp->d_un.d_val / sizeof(Elf_Addr);
break;
/*
* Don't process DT_DEBUG on MIPS as the dynamic section
* is mapped read-only. DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP is used instead.
*/
#ifndef __mips__
case DT_DEBUG:
/* XXX - not implemented yet */
if (!early)
dbg("Filling in DT_DEBUG entry");
((Elf_Dyn*)dynp)->d_un.d_ptr = (Elf_Addr) &r_debug;
break;
#endif
case DT_FLAGS:
if ((dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_ORIGIN) && trust)
obj->z_origin = true;
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_SYMBOLIC)
obj->symbolic = true;
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_TEXTREL)
obj->textrel = true;
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_BIND_NOW)
obj->bind_now = true;
/*if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_STATIC_TLS)
;*/
break;
#ifdef __mips__
case DT_MIPS_LOCAL_GOTNO:
obj->local_gotno = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_MIPS_SYMTABNO:
obj->symtabno = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_MIPS_GOTSYM:
obj->gotsym = dynp->d_un.d_val;
break;
case DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP:
#ifdef notyet
if (!early)
dbg("Filling in DT_DEBUG entry");
((Elf_Dyn*)dynp)->d_un.d_ptr = (Elf_Addr) &r_debug;
#endif
break;
#endif
case DT_FLAGS_1:
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_NOOPEN)
obj->z_noopen = true;
if ((dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_ORIGIN) && trust)
obj->z_origin = true;
/*if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_GLOBAL)
XXX ;*/
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_BIND_NOW)
obj->bind_now = true;
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_NODELETE)
obj->z_nodelete = true;
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_LOADFLTR)
obj->z_loadfltr = true;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (dynp->d_un.d_val & DF_1_NODEFLIB)
obj->z_nodeflib = true;
break;
default:
if (!early) {
dbg("Ignoring d_tag %ld = %#lx", (long)dynp->d_tag,
(long)dynp->d_tag);
}
break;
}
}
obj->traced = false;
if (plttype == DT_RELA) {
obj->pltrela = (const Elf_Rela *) obj->pltrel;
obj->pltrel = NULL;
obj->pltrelasize = obj->pltrelsize;
obj->pltrelsize = 0;
}
/* Determine size of dynsym table (equal to nchains of sysv hash) */
if (obj->valid_hash_sysv)
obj->dynsymcount = obj->nchains;
else if (obj->valid_hash_gnu) {
obj->dynsymcount = 0;
for (bkt = 0; bkt < obj->nbuckets_gnu; bkt++) {
if (obj->buckets_gnu[bkt] == 0)
continue;
hashval = &obj->chain_zero_gnu[obj->buckets_gnu[bkt]];
do
obj->dynsymcount++;
while ((*hashval++ & 1u) == 0);
}
obj->dynsymcount += obj->symndx_gnu;
}
}
static void
digest_dynamic2(Obj_Entry *obj, const Elf_Dyn *dyn_rpath,
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_soname, const Elf_Dyn *dyn_runpath)
{
if (obj->z_origin && obj->origin_path == NULL) {
obj->origin_path = xmalloc(PATH_MAX);
if (rtld_dirname_abs(obj->path, obj->origin_path) == -1)
die();
}
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (dyn_runpath != NULL) {
obj->runpath = (char *)obj->strtab + dyn_runpath->d_un.d_val;
if (obj->z_origin)
obj->runpath = origin_subst(obj->runpath, obj->origin_path);
}
else if (dyn_rpath != NULL) {
obj->rpath = (char *)obj->strtab + dyn_rpath->d_un.d_val;
if (obj->z_origin)
obj->rpath = origin_subst(obj->rpath, obj->origin_path);
}
if (dyn_soname != NULL)
object_add_name(obj, obj->strtab + dyn_soname->d_un.d_val);
}
static void
digest_dynamic(Obj_Entry *obj, int early)
{
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_rpath;
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_soname;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_runpath;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
digest_dynamic1(obj, early, &dyn_rpath, &dyn_soname, &dyn_runpath);
digest_dynamic2(obj, dyn_rpath, dyn_soname, dyn_runpath);
}
/*
* Process a shared object's program header. This is used only for the
* main program, when the kernel has already loaded the main program
* into memory before calling the dynamic linker. It creates and
* returns an Obj_Entry structure.
*/
static Obj_Entry *
digest_phdr(const Elf_Phdr *phdr, int phnum, caddr_t entry, const char *path)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
const Elf_Phdr *phlimit = phdr + phnum;
const Elf_Phdr *ph;
Elf_Addr note_start, note_end;
int nsegs = 0;
obj = obj_new();
for (ph = phdr; ph < phlimit; ph++) {
if (ph->p_type != PT_PHDR)
continue;
obj->phdr = phdr;
obj->phsize = ph->p_memsz;
obj->relocbase = (caddr_t)phdr - ph->p_vaddr;
break;
}
obj->stack_flags = PF_X | PF_R | PF_W;
for (ph = phdr; ph < phlimit; ph++) {
switch (ph->p_type) {
case PT_INTERP:
obj->interp = (const char *)(ph->p_vaddr + obj->relocbase);
break;
case PT_LOAD:
if (nsegs == 0) { /* First load segment */
obj->vaddrbase = trunc_page(ph->p_vaddr);
obj->mapbase = obj->vaddrbase + obj->relocbase;
obj->textsize = round_page(ph->p_vaddr + ph->p_memsz) -
obj->vaddrbase;
} else { /* Last load segment */
obj->mapsize = round_page(ph->p_vaddr + ph->p_memsz) -
obj->vaddrbase;
}
nsegs++;
break;
case PT_DYNAMIC:
obj->dynamic = (const Elf_Dyn *)(ph->p_vaddr + obj->relocbase);
break;
2004-08-03 08:51:00 +00:00
case PT_TLS:
obj->tlsindex = 1;
obj->tlssize = ph->p_memsz;
obj->tlsalign = ph->p_align;
obj->tlsinitsize = ph->p_filesz;
obj->tlsinit = (void*)(ph->p_vaddr + obj->relocbase);
2004-08-03 08:51:00 +00:00
break;
case PT_GNU_STACK:
obj->stack_flags = ph->p_flags;
break;
case PT_GNU_RELRO:
obj->relro_page = obj->relocbase + trunc_page(ph->p_vaddr);
obj->relro_size = round_page(ph->p_memsz);
break;
case PT_NOTE:
note_start = (Elf_Addr)obj->relocbase + ph->p_vaddr;
note_end = note_start + ph->p_filesz;
digest_notes(obj, note_start, note_end);
break;
}
}
if (nsegs < 1) {
_rtld_error("%s: too few PT_LOAD segments", path);
return NULL;
}
obj->entry = entry;
return obj;
}
void
digest_notes(Obj_Entry *obj, Elf_Addr note_start, Elf_Addr note_end)
{
const Elf_Note *note;
const char *note_name;
uintptr_t p;
for (note = (const Elf_Note *)note_start; (Elf_Addr)note < note_end;
note = (const Elf_Note *)((const char *)(note + 1) +
roundup2(note->n_namesz, sizeof(Elf32_Addr)) +
roundup2(note->n_descsz, sizeof(Elf32_Addr)))) {
if (note->n_namesz != sizeof(NOTE_FREEBSD_VENDOR) ||
note->n_descsz != sizeof(int32_t))
continue;
if (note->n_type != ABI_NOTETYPE &&
note->n_type != CRT_NOINIT_NOTETYPE)
continue;
note_name = (const char *)(note + 1);
if (strncmp(NOTE_FREEBSD_VENDOR, note_name,
sizeof(NOTE_FREEBSD_VENDOR)) != 0)
continue;
switch (note->n_type) {
case ABI_NOTETYPE:
/* FreeBSD osrel note */
p = (uintptr_t)(note + 1);
p += roundup2(note->n_namesz, sizeof(Elf32_Addr));
obj->osrel = *(const int32_t *)(p);
dbg("note osrel %d", obj->osrel);
break;
case CRT_NOINIT_NOTETYPE:
/* FreeBSD 'crt does not call init' note */
obj->crt_no_init = true;
dbg("note crt_no_init");
break;
}
}
}
static Obj_Entry *
dlcheck(void *handle)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
for (obj = obj_list; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next)
if (obj == (Obj_Entry *) handle)
break;
if (obj == NULL || obj->refcount == 0 || obj->dl_refcount == 0) {
_rtld_error("Invalid shared object handle %p", handle);
return NULL;
}
return obj;
}
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
/*
* If the given object is already in the donelist, return true. Otherwise
* add the object to the list and return false.
*/
static bool
donelist_check(DoneList *dlp, const Obj_Entry *obj)
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
{
unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; i < dlp->num_used; i++)
if (dlp->objs[i] == obj)
return true;
/*
* Our donelist allocation should always be sufficient. But if
* our threads locking isn't working properly, more shared objects
* could have been loaded since we allocated the list. That should
* never happen, but we'll handle it properly just in case it does.
*/
if (dlp->num_used < dlp->num_alloc)
dlp->objs[dlp->num_used++] = obj;
return false;
}
/*
* Hash function for symbol table lookup. Don't even think about changing
* this. It is specified by the System V ABI.
*/
unsigned long
elf_hash(const char *name)
{
const unsigned char *p = (const unsigned char *) name;
unsigned long h = 0;
unsigned long g;
while (*p != '\0') {
h = (h << 4) + *p++;
if ((g = h & 0xf0000000) != 0)
h ^= g >> 24;
h &= ~g;
}
return h;
}
/*
* The GNU hash function is the Daniel J. Bernstein hash clipped to 32 bits
* unsigned in case it's implemented with a wider type.
*/
static uint32_t
gnu_hash(const char *s)
{
uint32_t h;
unsigned char c;
h = 5381;
for (c = *s; c != '\0'; c = *++s)
h = h * 33 + c;
return (h & 0xffffffff);
}
/*
* Find the library with the given name, and return its full pathname.
* The returned string is dynamically allocated. Generates an error
* message and returns NULL if the library cannot be found.
*
* If the second argument is non-NULL, then it refers to an already-
* loaded shared object, whose library search path will be searched.
*
* The search order is:
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
* DT_RPATH in the referencing file _unless_ DT_RUNPATH is present (1)
* DT_RPATH of the main object if DSO without defined DT_RUNPATH (1)
* LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
* DT_RUNPATH in the referencing file
* ldconfig hints (if -z nodefaultlib, filter out default library directories
* from list)
* /lib:/usr/lib _unless_ the referencing file is linked with -z nodefaultlib
*
* (1) Handled in digest_dynamic2 - rpath left NULL if runpath defined.
*/
static char *
find_library(const char *xname, const Obj_Entry *refobj)
{
char *pathname;
char *name;
bool nodeflib, objgiven;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
objgiven = refobj != NULL;
if (strchr(xname, '/') != NULL) { /* Hard coded pathname */
if (xname[0] != '/' && !trust) {
_rtld_error("Absolute pathname required for shared object \"%s\"",
xname);
return NULL;
}
if (objgiven && refobj->z_origin) {
return (origin_subst(__DECONST(char *, xname),
refobj->origin_path));
} else {
return (xstrdup(xname));
}
}
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (libmap_disable || !objgiven ||
2003-06-18 16:17:13 +00:00
(name = lm_find(refobj->path, xname)) == NULL)
name = (char *)xname;
dbg(" Searching for \"%s\"", name);
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
/*
* If refobj->rpath != NULL, then refobj->runpath is NULL. Fall
* back to pre-conforming behaviour if user requested so with
* LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable and ignore -z
* nodeflib.
*/
if (objgiven && refobj->rpath != NULL && ld_library_path_rpath) {
if ((pathname = search_library_path(name, ld_library_path)) != NULL ||
(refobj != NULL &&
(pathname = search_library_path(name, refobj->rpath)) != NULL) ||
(pathname = search_library_path(name, gethints(false))) != NULL ||
(pathname = search_library_path(name, STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH)) != NULL)
return (pathname);
} else {
nodeflib = objgiven ? refobj->z_nodeflib : false;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if ((objgiven &&
(pathname = search_library_path(name, refobj->rpath)) != NULL) ||
(objgiven && refobj->runpath == NULL && refobj != obj_main &&
(pathname = search_library_path(name, obj_main->rpath)) != NULL) ||
(pathname = search_library_path(name, ld_library_path)) != NULL ||
(objgiven &&
(pathname = search_library_path(name, refobj->runpath)) != NULL) ||
(pathname = search_library_path(name, gethints(nodeflib))) != NULL ||
(objgiven && !nodeflib &&
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
(pathname = search_library_path(name, STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH)) != NULL))
return (pathname);
}
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (objgiven && refobj->path != NULL) {
_rtld_error("Shared object \"%s\" not found, required by \"%s\"",
name, basename(refobj->path));
} else {
_rtld_error("Shared object \"%s\" not found", name);
}
return NULL;
}
/*
* Given a symbol number in a referencing object, find the corresponding
* definition of the symbol. Returns a pointer to the symbol, or NULL if
* no definition was found. Returns a pointer to the Obj_Entry of the
* defining object via the reference parameter DEFOBJ_OUT.
*/
const Elf_Sym *
find_symdef(unsigned long symnum, const Obj_Entry *refobj,
const Obj_Entry **defobj_out, int flags, SymCache *cache,
RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
const Elf_Sym *ref;
1999-08-30 01:24:08 +00:00
const Elf_Sym *def;
const Obj_Entry *defobj;
SymLook req;
const char *name;
int res;
/*
* If we have already found this symbol, get the information from
* the cache.
*/
if (symnum >= refobj->dynsymcount)
return NULL; /* Bad object */
if (cache != NULL && cache[symnum].sym != NULL) {
*defobj_out = cache[symnum].obj;
return cache[symnum].sym;
}
ref = refobj->symtab + symnum;
name = refobj->strtab + ref->st_name;
def = NULL;
defobj = NULL;
/*
* We don't have to do a full scale lookup if the symbol is local.
* We know it will bind to the instance in this load module; to
* which we already have a pointer (ie ref). By not doing a lookup,
* we not only improve performance, but it also avoids unresolvable
* symbols when local symbols are not in the hash table. This has
* been seen with the ia64 toolchain.
*/
if (ELF_ST_BIND(ref->st_info) != STB_LOCAL) {
if (ELF_ST_TYPE(ref->st_info) == STT_SECTION) {
_rtld_error("%s: Bogus symbol table entry %lu", refobj->path,
symnum);
}
symlook_init(&req, name);
req.flags = flags;
req.ventry = fetch_ventry(refobj, symnum);
req.lockstate = lockstate;
res = symlook_default(&req, refobj);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
} else {
def = ref;
defobj = refobj;
}
1999-08-30 01:24:08 +00:00
/*
* If we found no definition and the reference is weak, treat the
1999-08-30 01:24:08 +00:00
* symbol as having the value zero.
*/
if (def == NULL && ELF_ST_BIND(ref->st_info) == STB_WEAK) {
def = &sym_zero;
defobj = obj_main;
}
if (def != NULL) {
*defobj_out = defobj;
/* Record the information in the cache to avoid subsequent lookups. */
if (cache != NULL) {
cache[symnum].sym = def;
cache[symnum].obj = defobj;
}
} else {
if (refobj != &obj_rtld)
_rtld_error("%s: Undefined symbol \"%s\"", refobj->path, name);
}
return def;
}
/*
* Return the search path from the ldconfig hints file, reading it if
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
* necessary. If nostdlib is true, then the default search paths are
* not added to result.
*
* Returns NULL if there are problems with the hints file,
* or if the search path there is empty.
*/
static const char *
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
gethints(bool nostdlib)
{
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
static char *hints, *filtered_path;
struct elfhints_hdr hdr;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
struct fill_search_info_args sargs, hargs;
struct dl_serinfo smeta, hmeta, *SLPinfo, *hintinfo;
struct dl_serpath *SLPpath, *hintpath;
char *p;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
unsigned int SLPndx, hintndx, fndx, fcount;
int fd;
size_t flen;
bool skip;
/* First call, read the hints file */
if (hints == NULL) {
/* Keep from trying again in case the hints file is bad. */
hints = "";
if ((fd = open(ld_elf_hints_path, O_RDONLY | O_CLOEXEC)) == -1)
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
return (NULL);
if (read(fd, &hdr, sizeof hdr) != sizeof hdr ||
hdr.magic != ELFHINTS_MAGIC ||
hdr.version != 1) {
close(fd);
return (NULL);
}
p = xmalloc(hdr.dirlistlen + 1);
if (lseek(fd, hdr.strtab + hdr.dirlist, SEEK_SET) == -1 ||
read(fd, p, hdr.dirlistlen + 1) !=
(ssize_t)hdr.dirlistlen + 1) {
free(p);
close(fd);
return (NULL);
}
hints = p;
close(fd);
}
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
/*
* If caller agreed to receive list which includes the default
* paths, we are done. Otherwise, if we still did not
* calculated filtered result, do it now.
*/
if (!nostdlib)
return (hints[0] != '\0' ? hints : NULL);
if (filtered_path != NULL)
goto filt_ret;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
/*
* Obtain the list of all configured search paths, and the
* list of the default paths.
*
* First estimate the size of the results.
*/
smeta.dls_size = __offsetof(struct dl_serinfo, dls_serpath);
smeta.dls_cnt = 0;
hmeta.dls_size = __offsetof(struct dl_serinfo, dls_serpath);
hmeta.dls_cnt = 0;
sargs.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE;
sargs.serinfo = &smeta;
hargs.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE;
hargs.serinfo = &hmeta;
path_enumerate(STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH, fill_search_info, &sargs);
path_enumerate(p, fill_search_info, &hargs);
SLPinfo = xmalloc(smeta.dls_size);
hintinfo = xmalloc(hmeta.dls_size);
/*
* Next fetch both sets of paths.
*/
sargs.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFO;
sargs.serinfo = SLPinfo;
sargs.serpath = &SLPinfo->dls_serpath[0];
sargs.strspace = (char *)&SLPinfo->dls_serpath[smeta.dls_cnt];
hargs.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFO;
hargs.serinfo = hintinfo;
hargs.serpath = &hintinfo->dls_serpath[0];
hargs.strspace = (char *)&hintinfo->dls_serpath[hmeta.dls_cnt];
path_enumerate(STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH, fill_search_info, &sargs);
path_enumerate(p, fill_search_info, &hargs);
/*
* Now calculate the difference between two sets, by excluding
* standard paths from the full set.
*/
fndx = 0;
fcount = 0;
filtered_path = xmalloc(hdr.dirlistlen + 1);
hintpath = &hintinfo->dls_serpath[0];
for (hintndx = 0; hintndx < hmeta.dls_cnt; hintndx++, hintpath++) {
skip = false;
SLPpath = &SLPinfo->dls_serpath[0];
/*
* Check each standard path against current.
*/
for (SLPndx = 0; SLPndx < smeta.dls_cnt; SLPndx++, SLPpath++) {
/* matched, skip the path */
if (!strcmp(hintpath->dls_name, SLPpath->dls_name)) {
skip = true;
break;
}
}
if (skip)
continue;
/*
* Not matched against any standard path, add the path
* to result. Separate consequtive paths with ':'.
*/
if (fcount > 0) {
filtered_path[fndx] = ':';
fndx++;
}
fcount++;
flen = strlen(hintpath->dls_name);
strncpy((filtered_path + fndx), hintpath->dls_name, flen);
fndx += flen;
}
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
filtered_path[fndx] = '\0';
free(SLPinfo);
free(hintinfo);
filt_ret:
return (filtered_path[0] != '\0' ? filtered_path : NULL);
}
static void
init_dag(Obj_Entry *root)
{
const Needed_Entry *needed;
const Objlist_Entry *elm;
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
DoneList donelist;
if (root->dag_inited)
2010-11-04 09:19:14 +00:00
return;
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
donelist_init(&donelist);
/* Root object belongs to own DAG. */
objlist_push_tail(&root->dldags, root);
objlist_push_tail(&root->dagmembers, root);
donelist_check(&donelist, root);
/*
* Add dependencies of root object to DAG in breadth order
* by exploiting the fact that each new object get added
* to the tail of the dagmembers list.
*/
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link) {
for (needed = elm->obj->needed; needed != NULL; needed = needed->next) {
if (needed->obj == NULL || donelist_check(&donelist, needed->obj))
continue;
objlist_push_tail(&needed->obj->dldags, root);
objlist_push_tail(&root->dagmembers, needed->obj);
}
}
root->dag_inited = true;
}
static void
process_nodelete(Obj_Entry *root)
{
const Objlist_Entry *elm;
/*
* Walk over object DAG and process every dependent object that
* is marked as DF_1_NODELETE. They need to grow their own DAG,
* which then should have its reference upped separately.
*/
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link) {
if (elm->obj != NULL && elm->obj->z_nodelete &&
!elm->obj->ref_nodel) {
dbg("obj %s nodelete", elm->obj->path);
init_dag(elm->obj);
ref_dag(elm->obj);
elm->obj->ref_nodel = true;
}
}
}
/*
* Initialize the dynamic linker. The argument is the address at which
* the dynamic linker has been mapped into memory. The primary task of
* this function is to relocate the dynamic linker.
*/
static void
init_rtld(caddr_t mapbase, Elf_Auxinfo **aux_info)
{
Obj_Entry objtmp; /* Temporary rtld object */
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_rpath;
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_soname;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
const Elf_Dyn *dyn_runpath;
/*
* Conjure up an Obj_Entry structure for the dynamic linker.
*
* The "path" member can't be initialized yet because string constants
* cannot yet be accessed. Below we will set it correctly.
*/
memset(&objtmp, 0, sizeof(objtmp));
objtmp.path = NULL;
objtmp.rtld = true;
objtmp.mapbase = mapbase;
#ifdef PIC
objtmp.relocbase = mapbase;
#endif
if (RTLD_IS_DYNAMIC()) {
objtmp.dynamic = rtld_dynamic(&objtmp);
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
digest_dynamic1(&objtmp, 1, &dyn_rpath, &dyn_soname, &dyn_runpath);
assert(objtmp.needed == NULL);
#if !defined(__mips__)
/* MIPS has a bogus DT_TEXTREL. */
assert(!objtmp.textrel);
#endif
/*
* Temporarily put the dynamic linker entry into the object list, so
* that symbols can be found.
*/
relocate_objects(&objtmp, true, &objtmp, 0, NULL);
}
/* Initialize the object list. */
obj_tail = &obj_list;
/* Now that non-local variables can be accesses, copy out obj_rtld. */
memcpy(&obj_rtld, &objtmp, sizeof(obj_rtld));
if (aux_info[AT_PAGESZ] != NULL)
pagesize = aux_info[AT_PAGESZ]->a_un.a_val;
if (aux_info[AT_OSRELDATE] != NULL)
osreldate = aux_info[AT_OSRELDATE]->a_un.a_val;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
digest_dynamic2(&obj_rtld, dyn_rpath, dyn_soname, dyn_runpath);
/* Replace the path with a dynamically allocated copy. */
obj_rtld.path = xstrdup(PATH_RTLD);
r_debug.r_brk = r_debug_state;
r_debug.r_state = RT_CONSISTENT;
}
/*
* Add the init functions from a needed object list (and its recursive
* needed objects) to "list". This is not used directly; it is a helper
* function for initlist_add_objects(). The write lock must be held
* when this function is called.
*/
static void
initlist_add_neededs(Needed_Entry *needed, Objlist *list)
{
/* Recursively process the successor needed objects. */
if (needed->next != NULL)
initlist_add_neededs(needed->next, list);
/* Process the current needed object. */
if (needed->obj != NULL)
initlist_add_objects(needed->obj, &needed->obj->next, list);
}
/*
* Scan all of the DAGs rooted in the range of objects from "obj" to
* "tail" and add their init functions to "list". This recurses over
* the DAGs and ensure the proper init ordering such that each object's
* needed libraries are initialized before the object itself. At the
* same time, this function adds the objects to the global finalization
* list "list_fini" in the opposite order. The write lock must be
* held when this function is called.
*/
static void
initlist_add_objects(Obj_Entry *obj, Obj_Entry **tail, Objlist *list)
{
if (obj->init_scanned || obj->init_done)
return;
obj->init_scanned = true;
/* Recursively process the successor objects. */
if (&obj->next != tail)
initlist_add_objects(obj->next, tail, list);
/* Recursively process the needed objects. */
if (obj->needed != NULL)
initlist_add_neededs(obj->needed, list);
if (obj->needed_filtees != NULL)
initlist_add_neededs(obj->needed_filtees, list);
if (obj->needed_aux_filtees != NULL)
initlist_add_neededs(obj->needed_aux_filtees, list);
/* Add the object to the init list. */
if (obj->preinit_array != (Elf_Addr)NULL || obj->init != (Elf_Addr)NULL ||
obj->init_array != (Elf_Addr)NULL)
objlist_push_tail(list, obj);
/* Add the object to the global fini list in the reverse order. */
if ((obj->fini != (Elf_Addr)NULL || obj->fini_array != (Elf_Addr)NULL)
&& !obj->on_fini_list) {
objlist_push_head(&list_fini, obj);
obj->on_fini_list = true;
}
}
#ifndef FPTR_TARGET
#define FPTR_TARGET(f) ((Elf_Addr) (f))
#endif
static void
free_needed_filtees(Needed_Entry *n)
{
Needed_Entry *needed, *needed1;
for (needed = n; needed != NULL; needed = needed->next) {
if (needed->obj != NULL) {
dlclose(needed->obj);
needed->obj = NULL;
}
}
for (needed = n; needed != NULL; needed = needed1) {
needed1 = needed->next;
free(needed);
}
}
static void
unload_filtees(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
free_needed_filtees(obj->needed_filtees);
obj->needed_filtees = NULL;
free_needed_filtees(obj->needed_aux_filtees);
obj->needed_aux_filtees = NULL;
obj->filtees_loaded = false;
}
static void
load_filtee1(Obj_Entry *obj, Needed_Entry *needed, int flags,
RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
for (; needed != NULL; needed = needed->next) {
needed->obj = dlopen_object(obj->strtab + needed->name, -1, obj,
flags, ((ld_loadfltr || obj->z_loadfltr) ? RTLD_NOW : RTLD_LAZY) |
RTLD_LOCAL, lockstate);
}
}
static void
load_filtees(Obj_Entry *obj, int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
lock_restart_for_upgrade(lockstate);
if (!obj->filtees_loaded) {
load_filtee1(obj, obj->needed_filtees, flags, lockstate);
load_filtee1(obj, obj->needed_aux_filtees, flags, lockstate);
obj->filtees_loaded = true;
}
}
static int
process_needed(Obj_Entry *obj, Needed_Entry *needed, int flags)
{
Obj_Entry *obj1;
for (; needed != NULL; needed = needed->next) {
obj1 = needed->obj = load_object(obj->strtab + needed->name, -1, obj,
flags & ~RTLD_LO_NOLOAD);
if (obj1 == NULL && !ld_tracing && (flags & RTLD_LO_FILTEES) == 0)
return (-1);
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Given a shared object, traverse its list of needed objects, and load
* each of them. Returns 0 on success. Generates an error message and
* returns -1 on failure.
*/
static int
load_needed_objects(Obj_Entry *first, int flags)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
for (obj = first; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
if (process_needed(obj, obj->needed, flags) == -1)
return (-1);
}
return (0);
}
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
static int
load_preload_objects(void)
{
char *p = ld_preload;
static const char delim[] = " \t:;";
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
if (p == NULL)
return 0;
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
p += strspn(p, delim);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
while (*p != '\0') {
size_t len = strcspn(p, delim);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
char savech;
savech = p[len];
p[len] = '\0';
if (load_object(p, -1, NULL, 0) == NULL)
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
return -1; /* XXX - cleanup */
p[len] = savech;
p += len;
p += strspn(p, delim);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
}
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_PRELOAD_FINISHED, NULL, NULL, 0, 0, NULL);
1998-09-22 02:09:56 +00:00
return 0;
}
static const char *
printable_path(const char *path)
{
return (path == NULL ? "<unknown>" : path);
}
/*
* Load a shared object into memory, if it is not already loaded. The
* object may be specified by name or by user-supplied file descriptor
* fd_u. In the later case, the fd_u descriptor is not closed, but its
* duplicate is.
*
* Returns a pointer to the Obj_Entry for the object. Returns NULL
* on failure.
*/
static Obj_Entry *
load_object(const char *name, int fd_u, const Obj_Entry *refobj, int flags)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
int fd;
struct stat sb;
char *path;
if (name != NULL) {
for (obj = obj_list->next; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
if (object_match_name(obj, name))
return (obj);
}
path = find_library(name, refobj);
if (path == NULL)
return (NULL);
} else
path = NULL;
/*
* If we didn't find a match by pathname, or the name is not
* supplied, open the file and check again by device and inode.
* This avoids false mismatches caused by multiple links or ".."
* in pathnames.
*
* To avoid a race, we open the file and use fstat() rather than
* using stat().
*/
fd = -1;
if (fd_u == -1) {
if ((fd = open(path, O_RDONLY | O_CLOEXEC)) == -1) {
_rtld_error("Cannot open \"%s\"", path);
free(path);
return (NULL);
}
} else {
fd = fcntl(fd_u, F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC, 0);
if (fd == -1) {
_rtld_error("Cannot dup fd");
free(path);
return (NULL);
}
}
if (fstat(fd, &sb) == -1) {
_rtld_error("Cannot fstat \"%s\"", printable_path(path));
close(fd);
free(path);
return NULL;
}
for (obj = obj_list->next; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next)
if (obj->ino == sb.st_ino && obj->dev == sb.st_dev)
break;
if (obj != NULL && name != NULL) {
object_add_name(obj, name);
free(path);
close(fd);
return obj;
}
if (flags & RTLD_LO_NOLOAD) {
free(path);
close(fd);
return (NULL);
}
/* First use of this object, so we must map it in */
obj = do_load_object(fd, name, path, &sb, flags);
if (obj == NULL)
free(path);
close(fd);
return obj;
}
static Obj_Entry *
do_load_object(int fd, const char *name, char *path, struct stat *sbp,
int flags)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
struct statfs fs;
/*
* but first, make sure that environment variables haven't been
* used to circumvent the noexec flag on a filesystem.
*/
if (dangerous_ld_env) {
if (fstatfs(fd, &fs) != 0) {
_rtld_error("Cannot fstatfs \"%s\"", printable_path(path));
return NULL;
}
if (fs.f_flags & MNT_NOEXEC) {
_rtld_error("Cannot execute objects on %s\n", fs.f_mntonname);
return NULL;
}
}
dbg("loading \"%s\"", printable_path(path));
obj = map_object(fd, printable_path(path), sbp);
if (obj == NULL)
return NULL;
/*
* If DT_SONAME is present in the object, digest_dynamic2 already
* added it to the object names.
*/
if (name != NULL)
object_add_name(obj, name);
obj->path = path;
digest_dynamic(obj, 0);
dbg("%s valid_hash_sysv %d valid_hash_gnu %d dynsymcount %d", obj->path,
obj->valid_hash_sysv, obj->valid_hash_gnu, obj->dynsymcount);
if (obj->z_noopen && (flags & (RTLD_LO_DLOPEN | RTLD_LO_TRACE)) ==
RTLD_LO_DLOPEN) {
dbg("refusing to load non-loadable \"%s\"", obj->path);
_rtld_error("Cannot dlopen non-loadable %s", obj->path);
munmap(obj->mapbase, obj->mapsize);
obj_free(obj);
return (NULL);
}
*obj_tail = obj;
obj_tail = &obj->next;
obj_count++;
obj_loads++;
linkmap_add(obj); /* for GDB & dlinfo() */
max_stack_flags |= obj->stack_flags;
dbg(" %p .. %p: %s", obj->mapbase,
obj->mapbase + obj->mapsize - 1, obj->path);
if (obj->textrel)
dbg(" WARNING: %s has impure text", obj->path);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_LOAD_OBJECT, obj, obj->mapbase, obj->mapsize, 0,
obj->path);
return obj;
}
static Obj_Entry *
obj_from_addr(const void *addr)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
for (obj = obj_list; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
if (addr < (void *) obj->mapbase)
continue;
if (addr < (void *) (obj->mapbase + obj->mapsize))
return obj;
}
return NULL;
}
static void
preinit_main(void)
{
Elf_Addr *preinit_addr;
int index;
preinit_addr = (Elf_Addr *)obj_main->preinit_array;
if (preinit_addr == NULL)
return;
for (index = 0; index < obj_main->preinit_array_num; index++) {
if (preinit_addr[index] != 0 && preinit_addr[index] != 1) {
dbg("calling preinit function for %s at %p", obj_main->path,
(void *)preinit_addr[index]);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_INIT_CALL, obj_main, (void *)preinit_addr[index],
0, 0, obj_main->path);
call_init_pointer(obj_main, preinit_addr[index]);
}
}
}
/*
* Call the finalization functions for each of the objects in "list"
* belonging to the DAG of "root" and referenced once. If NULL "root"
* is specified, every finalization function will be called regardless
* of the reference count and the list elements won't be freed. All of
* the objects are expected to have non-NULL fini functions.
*/
static void
objlist_call_fini(Objlist *list, Obj_Entry *root, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
char *saved_msg;
Elf_Addr *fini_addr;
int index;
assert(root == NULL || root->refcount == 1);
/*
* Preserve the current error message since a fini function might
* call into the dynamic linker and overwrite it.
*/
saved_msg = errmsg_save();
do {
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, list, link) {
if (root != NULL && (elm->obj->refcount != 1 ||
objlist_find(&root->dagmembers, elm->obj) == NULL))
continue;
/* Remove object from fini list to prevent recursive invocation. */
STAILQ_REMOVE(list, elm, Struct_Objlist_Entry, link);
/*
* XXX: If a dlopen() call references an object while the
* fini function is in progress, we might end up trying to
* unload the referenced object in dlclose() or the object
* won't be unloaded although its fini function has been
* called.
*/
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
/*
* It is legal to have both DT_FINI and DT_FINI_ARRAY defined.
* When this happens, DT_FINI_ARRAY is processed first.
*/
fini_addr = (Elf_Addr *)elm->obj->fini_array;
if (fini_addr != NULL && elm->obj->fini_array_num > 0) {
for (index = elm->obj->fini_array_num - 1; index >= 0;
index--) {
if (fini_addr[index] != 0 && fini_addr[index] != 1) {
dbg("calling fini function for %s at %p",
elm->obj->path, (void *)fini_addr[index]);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_FINI_CALL, elm->obj,
(void *)fini_addr[index], 0, 0, elm->obj->path);
call_initfini_pointer(elm->obj, fini_addr[index]);
}
}
}
if (elm->obj->fini != (Elf_Addr)NULL) {
dbg("calling fini function for %s at %p", elm->obj->path,
(void *)elm->obj->fini);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_FINI_CALL, elm->obj, (void *)elm->obj->fini,
0, 0, elm->obj->path);
call_initfini_pointer(elm->obj, elm->obj->fini);
}
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
/* No need to free anything if process is going down. */
if (root != NULL)
free(elm);
/*
* We must restart the list traversal after every fini call
* because a dlclose() call from the fini function or from
* another thread might have modified the reference counts.
*/
break;
}
} while (elm != NULL);
errmsg_restore(saved_msg);
}
/*
* Call the initialization functions for each of the objects in
* "list". All of the objects are expected to have non-NULL init
* functions.
*/
static void
objlist_call_init(Objlist *list, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
Obj_Entry *obj;
char *saved_msg;
Elf_Addr *init_addr;
int index;
/*
* Clean init_scanned flag so that objects can be rechecked and
* possibly initialized earlier if any of vectors called below
* cause the change by using dlopen.
*/
for (obj = obj_list; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next)
obj->init_scanned = false;
/*
* Preserve the current error message since an init function might
* call into the dynamic linker and overwrite it.
*/
saved_msg = errmsg_save();
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, list, link) {
if (elm->obj->init_done) /* Initialized early. */
continue;
/*
* Race: other thread might try to use this object before current
* one completes the initilization. Not much can be done here
* without better locking.
*/
elm->obj->init_done = true;
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
/*
* It is legal to have both DT_INIT and DT_INIT_ARRAY defined.
* When this happens, DT_INIT is processed first.
*/
if (elm->obj->init != (Elf_Addr)NULL) {
dbg("calling init function for %s at %p", elm->obj->path,
(void *)elm->obj->init);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_INIT_CALL, elm->obj, (void *)elm->obj->init,
0, 0, elm->obj->path);
call_initfini_pointer(elm->obj, elm->obj->init);
}
init_addr = (Elf_Addr *)elm->obj->init_array;
if (init_addr != NULL) {
for (index = 0; index < elm->obj->init_array_num; index++) {
if (init_addr[index] != 0 && init_addr[index] != 1) {
dbg("calling init function for %s at %p", elm->obj->path,
(void *)init_addr[index]);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_INIT_CALL, elm->obj,
(void *)init_addr[index], 0, 0, elm->obj->path);
call_init_pointer(elm->obj, init_addr[index]);
}
}
}
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
}
errmsg_restore(saved_msg);
}
static void
objlist_clear(Objlist *list)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
while (!STAILQ_EMPTY(list)) {
elm = STAILQ_FIRST(list);
STAILQ_REMOVE_HEAD(list, link);
free(elm);
}
}
static Objlist_Entry *
objlist_find(Objlist *list, const Obj_Entry *obj)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, list, link)
if (elm->obj == obj)
return elm;
return NULL;
}
static void
objlist_init(Objlist *list)
{
STAILQ_INIT(list);
}
static void
objlist_push_head(Objlist *list, Obj_Entry *obj)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
elm = NEW(Objlist_Entry);
elm->obj = obj;
STAILQ_INSERT_HEAD(list, elm, link);
}
static void
objlist_push_tail(Objlist *list, Obj_Entry *obj)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
elm = NEW(Objlist_Entry);
elm->obj = obj;
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(list, elm, link);
}
static void
objlist_remove(Objlist *list, Obj_Entry *obj)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
if ((elm = objlist_find(list, obj)) != NULL) {
STAILQ_REMOVE(list, elm, Struct_Objlist_Entry, link);
free(elm);
}
}
/*
* Relocate dag rooted in the specified object.
* Returns 0 on success, or -1 on failure.
*/
static int
relocate_object_dag(Obj_Entry *root, bool bind_now, Obj_Entry *rtldobj,
int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
int error;
error = 0;
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link) {
error = relocate_object(elm->obj, bind_now, rtldobj, flags,
lockstate);
if (error == -1)
break;
}
return (error);
}
/*
* Relocate single object.
* Returns 0 on success, or -1 on failure.
*/
static int
relocate_object(Obj_Entry *obj, bool bind_now, Obj_Entry *rtldobj,
int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
if (obj->relocated)
return (0);
obj->relocated = true;
if (obj != rtldobj)
dbg("relocating \"%s\"", obj->path);
if (obj->symtab == NULL || obj->strtab == NULL ||
!(obj->valid_hash_sysv || obj->valid_hash_gnu)) {
_rtld_error("%s: Shared object has no run-time symbol table",
obj->path);
return (-1);
}
if (obj->textrel) {
/* There are relocations to the write-protected text segment. */
if (mprotect(obj->mapbase, obj->textsize,
PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_EXEC) == -1) {
_rtld_error("%s: Cannot write-enable text segment: %s",
obj->path, rtld_strerror(errno));
return (-1);
}
}
/* Process the non-PLT relocations. */
if (reloc_non_plt(obj, rtldobj, flags, lockstate))
return (-1);
if (obj->textrel) { /* Re-protected the text segment. */
if (mprotect(obj->mapbase, obj->textsize,
PROT_READ|PROT_EXEC) == -1) {
_rtld_error("%s: Cannot write-protect text segment: %s",
obj->path, rtld_strerror(errno));
return (-1);
}
}
/* Set the special PLT or GOT entries. */
init_pltgot(obj);
/* Process the PLT relocations. */
if (reloc_plt(obj) == -1)
return (-1);
/* Relocate the jump slots if we are doing immediate binding. */
if (obj->bind_now || bind_now)
if (reloc_jmpslots(obj, flags, lockstate) == -1)
return (-1);
if (obj->relro_size > 0) {
if (mprotect(obj->relro_page, obj->relro_size,
PROT_READ) == -1) {
_rtld_error("%s: Cannot enforce relro protection: %s",
obj->path, rtld_strerror(errno));
return (-1);
}
}
/*
* Set up the magic number and version in the Obj_Entry. These
* were checked in the crt1.o from the original ElfKit, so we
* set them for backward compatibility.
*/
obj->magic = RTLD_MAGIC;
obj->version = RTLD_VERSION;
return (0);
}
/*
* Relocate newly-loaded shared objects. The argument is a pointer to
* the Obj_Entry for the first such object. All objects from the first
* to the end of the list of objects are relocated. Returns 0 on success,
* or -1 on failure.
*/
static int
relocate_objects(Obj_Entry *first, bool bind_now, Obj_Entry *rtldobj,
int flags, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
int error;
for (error = 0, obj = first; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
error = relocate_object(obj, bind_now, rtldobj, flags,
lockstate);
if (error == -1)
break;
}
return (error);
}
/*
* The handling of R_MACHINE_IRELATIVE relocations and jumpslots
* referencing STT_GNU_IFUNC symbols is postponed till the other
* relocations are done. The indirect functions specified as
* ifunc are allowed to call other symbols, so we need to have
* objects relocated before asking for resolution from indirects.
*
* The R_MACHINE_IRELATIVE slots are resolved in greedy fashion,
* instead of the usual lazy handling of PLT slots. It is
* consistent with how GNU does it.
*/
static int
resolve_object_ifunc(Obj_Entry *obj, bool bind_now, int flags,
RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
if (obj->irelative && reloc_iresolve(obj, lockstate) == -1)
return (-1);
if ((obj->bind_now || bind_now) && obj->gnu_ifunc &&
reloc_gnu_ifunc(obj, flags, lockstate) == -1)
return (-1);
return (0);
}
static int
resolve_objects_ifunc(Obj_Entry *first, bool bind_now, int flags,
RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
for (obj = first; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
if (resolve_object_ifunc(obj, bind_now, flags, lockstate) == -1)
return (-1);
}
return (0);
}
static int
initlist_objects_ifunc(Objlist *list, bool bind_now, int flags,
RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, list, link) {
if (resolve_object_ifunc(elm->obj, bind_now, flags,
lockstate) == -1)
return (-1);
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Cleanup procedure. It will be called (by the atexit mechanism) just
* before the process exits.
*/
static void
rtld_exit(void)
{
RtldLockState lockstate;
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
dbg("rtld_exit()");
objlist_call_fini(&list_fini, NULL, &lockstate);
/* No need to remove the items from the list, since we are exiting. */
if (!libmap_disable)
lm_fini();
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
}
static void *
path_enumerate(const char *path, path_enum_proc callback, void *arg)
{
#ifdef COMPAT_32BIT
const char *trans;
#endif
if (path == NULL)
return (NULL);
path += strspn(path, ":;");
while (*path != '\0') {
size_t len;
char *res;
len = strcspn(path, ":;");
#ifdef COMPAT_32BIT
trans = lm_findn(NULL, path, len);
if (trans)
res = callback(trans, strlen(trans), arg);
else
#endif
res = callback(path, len, arg);
if (res != NULL)
return (res);
path += len;
path += strspn(path, ":;");
}
return (NULL);
}
struct try_library_args {
const char *name;
size_t namelen;
char *buffer;
size_t buflen;
};
static void *
try_library_path(const char *dir, size_t dirlen, void *param)
{
struct try_library_args *arg;
arg = param;
if (*dir == '/' || trust) {
char *pathname;
if (dirlen + 1 + arg->namelen + 1 > arg->buflen)
return (NULL);
pathname = arg->buffer;
strncpy(pathname, dir, dirlen);
pathname[dirlen] = '/';
strcpy(pathname + dirlen + 1, arg->name);
dbg(" Trying \"%s\"", pathname);
if (access(pathname, F_OK) == 0) { /* We found it */
pathname = xmalloc(dirlen + 1 + arg->namelen + 1);
strcpy(pathname, arg->buffer);
return (pathname);
}
}
return (NULL);
}
static char *
search_library_path(const char *name, const char *path)
{
char *p;
struct try_library_args arg;
if (path == NULL)
return NULL;
arg.name = name;
arg.namelen = strlen(name);
arg.buffer = xmalloc(PATH_MAX);
arg.buflen = PATH_MAX;
p = path_enumerate(path, try_library_path, &arg);
free(arg.buffer);
return (p);
}
int
dlclose(void *handle)
{
Obj_Entry *root;
RtldLockState lockstate;
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
root = dlcheck(handle);
if (root == NULL) {
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return -1;
}
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_DLCLOSE_START, handle, NULL, 0, root->dl_refcount,
root->path);
/* Unreference the object and its dependencies. */
root->dl_refcount--;
if (root->refcount == 1) {
/*
* The object will be no longer referenced, so we must unload it.
* First, call the fini functions.
*/
objlist_call_fini(&list_fini, root, &lockstate);
unref_dag(root);
/* Finish cleaning up the newly-unreferenced objects. */
GDB_STATE(RT_DELETE,&root->linkmap);
unload_object(root);
GDB_STATE(RT_CONSISTENT,NULL);
} else
unref_dag(root);
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_DLCLOSE_STOP, handle, NULL, 0, 0, NULL);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return 0;
}
char *
dlerror(void)
{
char *msg = error_message;
error_message = NULL;
return msg;
}
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
/*
* This function is deprecated and has no effect.
*/
void
dllockinit(void *context,
void *(*lock_create)(void *context),
void (*rlock_acquire)(void *lock),
void (*wlock_acquire)(void *lock),
void (*lock_release)(void *lock),
void (*lock_destroy)(void *lock),
void (*context_destroy)(void *context))
{
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
static void *cur_context;
static void (*cur_context_destroy)(void *);
/* Just destroy the context from the previous call, if necessary. */
if (cur_context_destroy != NULL)
cur_context_destroy(cur_context);
cur_context = context;
cur_context_destroy = context_destroy;
}
void *
dlopen(const char *name, int mode)
{
return (rtld_dlopen(name, -1, mode));
}
void *
fdlopen(int fd, int mode)
{
return (rtld_dlopen(NULL, fd, mode));
}
static void *
rtld_dlopen(const char *name, int fd, int mode)
{
RtldLockState lockstate;
int lo_flags;
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_DLOPEN_START, NULL, NULL, 0, mode, name);
ld_tracing = (mode & RTLD_TRACE) == 0 ? NULL : "1";
if (ld_tracing != NULL) {
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (sigsetjmp(lockstate.env, 0) != 0)
lock_upgrade(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
environ = (char **)*get_program_var_addr("environ", &lockstate);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
}
lo_flags = RTLD_LO_DLOPEN;
if (mode & RTLD_NODELETE)
lo_flags |= RTLD_LO_NODELETE;
if (mode & RTLD_NOLOAD)
lo_flags |= RTLD_LO_NOLOAD;
if (ld_tracing != NULL)
lo_flags |= RTLD_LO_TRACE;
return (dlopen_object(name, fd, obj_main, lo_flags,
mode & (RTLD_MODEMASK | RTLD_GLOBAL), NULL));
}
static void
dlopen_cleanup(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
obj->dl_refcount--;
unref_dag(obj);
if (obj->refcount == 0)
unload_object(obj);
}
static Obj_Entry *
dlopen_object(const char *name, int fd, Obj_Entry *refobj, int lo_flags,
int mode, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
Obj_Entry **old_obj_tail;
Obj_Entry *obj;
Objlist initlist;
RtldLockState mlockstate;
int result;
objlist_init(&initlist);
if (lockstate == NULL && !(lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY)) {
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &mlockstate);
lockstate = &mlockstate;
}
GDB_STATE(RT_ADD,NULL);
old_obj_tail = obj_tail;
obj = NULL;
if (name == NULL && fd == -1) {
obj = obj_main;
obj->refcount++;
} else {
obj = load_object(name, fd, refobj, lo_flags);
}
if (obj) {
obj->dl_refcount++;
if (mode & RTLD_GLOBAL && objlist_find(&list_global, obj) == NULL)
objlist_push_tail(&list_global, obj);
if (*old_obj_tail != NULL) { /* We loaded something new. */
assert(*old_obj_tail == obj);
result = load_needed_objects(obj,
lo_flags & (RTLD_LO_DLOPEN | RTLD_LO_EARLY));
init_dag(obj);
ref_dag(obj);
if (result != -1)
result = rtld_verify_versions(&obj->dagmembers);
if (result != -1 && ld_tracing)
goto trace;
if (result == -1 || relocate_object_dag(obj,
(mode & RTLD_MODEMASK) == RTLD_NOW, &obj_rtld,
(lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY) ? SYMLOOK_EARLY : 0,
lockstate) == -1) {
dlopen_cleanup(obj);
obj = NULL;
} else if (lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY) {
/*
* Do not call the init functions for early loaded
* filtees. The image is still not initialized enough
* for them to work.
*
* Our object is found by the global object list and
* will be ordered among all init calls done right
* before transferring control to main.
*/
} else {
/* Make list of init functions to call. */
initlist_add_objects(obj, &obj->next, &initlist);
}
/*
* Process all no_delete objects here, given them own
* DAGs to prevent their dependencies from being unloaded.
* This has to be done after we have loaded all of the
* dependencies, so that we do not miss any.
*/
if (obj != NULL)
process_nodelete(obj);
} else {
/*
* Bump the reference counts for objects on this DAG. If
* this is the first dlopen() call for the object that was
* already loaded as a dependency, initialize the dag
* starting at it.
*/
init_dag(obj);
ref_dag(obj);
if ((lo_flags & RTLD_LO_TRACE) != 0)
goto trace;
}
if (obj != NULL && ((lo_flags & RTLD_LO_NODELETE) != 0 ||
obj->z_nodelete) && !obj->ref_nodel) {
dbg("obj %s nodelete", obj->path);
ref_dag(obj);
obj->z_nodelete = obj->ref_nodel = true;
}
}
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_DLOPEN_STOP, obj, NULL, 0, obj ? obj->dl_refcount : 0,
name);
GDB_STATE(RT_CONSISTENT,obj ? &obj->linkmap : NULL);
if (!(lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY)) {
map_stacks_exec(lockstate);
}
if (initlist_objects_ifunc(&initlist, (mode & RTLD_MODEMASK) == RTLD_NOW,
(lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY) ? SYMLOOK_EARLY : 0,
lockstate) == -1) {
objlist_clear(&initlist);
dlopen_cleanup(obj);
if (lockstate == &mlockstate)
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
return (NULL);
}
if (!(lo_flags & RTLD_LO_EARLY)) {
/* Call the init functions. */
objlist_call_init(&initlist, lockstate);
}
objlist_clear(&initlist);
if (lockstate == &mlockstate)
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
return obj;
trace:
trace_loaded_objects(obj);
if (lockstate == &mlockstate)
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, lockstate);
exit(0);
}
static void *
do_dlsym(void *handle, const char *name, void *retaddr, const Ver_Entry *ve,
int flags)
{
DoneList donelist;
const Obj_Entry *obj, *defobj;
const Elf_Sym *def;
SymLook req;
RtldLockState lockstate;
#ifndef __ia64__
tls_index ti;
#endif
int res;
def = NULL;
defobj = NULL;
symlook_init(&req, name);
req.ventry = ve;
req.flags = flags | SYMLOOK_IN_PLT;
req.lockstate = &lockstate;
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (sigsetjmp(lockstate.env, 0) != 0)
lock_upgrade(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (handle == NULL || handle == RTLD_NEXT ||
handle == RTLD_DEFAULT || handle == RTLD_SELF) {
if ((obj = obj_from_addr(retaddr)) == NULL) {
_rtld_error("Cannot determine caller's shared object");
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return NULL;
}
if (handle == NULL) { /* Just the caller's shared object. */
res = symlook_obj(&req, obj);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
} else if (handle == RTLD_NEXT || /* Objects after caller's */
handle == RTLD_SELF) { /* ... caller included */
if (handle == RTLD_NEXT)
obj = obj->next;
for (; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
res = symlook_obj(&req, obj);
if (res == 0) {
if (def == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
if (ELF_ST_BIND(def->st_info) != STB_WEAK)
break;
}
}
}
/*
* Search the dynamic linker itself, and possibly resolve the
* symbol from there. This is how the application links to
* dynamic linker services such as dlopen.
*/
if (def == NULL || ELF_ST_BIND(def->st_info) == STB_WEAK) {
res = symlook_obj(&req, &obj_rtld);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
}
} else {
assert(handle == RTLD_DEFAULT);
res = symlook_default(&req, obj);
if (res == 0) {
defobj = req.defobj_out;
def = req.sym_out;
}
}
} else {
if ((obj = dlcheck(handle)) == NULL) {
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return NULL;
}
donelist_init(&donelist);
if (obj->mainprog) {
/* Handle obtained by dlopen(NULL, ...) implies global scope. */
res = symlook_global(&req, &donelist);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
/*
* Search the dynamic linker itself, and possibly resolve the
* symbol from there. This is how the application links to
* dynamic linker services such as dlopen.
*/
if (def == NULL || ELF_ST_BIND(def->st_info) == STB_WEAK) {
res = symlook_obj(&req, &obj_rtld);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
}
}
else {
/* Search the whole DAG rooted at the given object. */
res = symlook_list(&req, &obj->dagmembers, &donelist);
if (res == 0) {
def = req.sym_out;
defobj = req.defobj_out;
}
}
}
if (def != NULL) {
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
/*
* The value required by the caller is derived from the value
* of the symbol. For the ia64 architecture, we need to
* construct a function descriptor which the caller can use to
* call the function with the right 'gp' value. For other
* architectures and for non-functions, the value is simply
* the relocated value of the symbol.
*/
if (ELF_ST_TYPE(def->st_info) == STT_FUNC)
return (make_function_pointer(def, defobj));
else if (ELF_ST_TYPE(def->st_info) == STT_GNU_IFUNC)
return (rtld_resolve_ifunc(defobj, def));
else if (ELF_ST_TYPE(def->st_info) == STT_TLS) {
#ifdef __ia64__
return (__tls_get_addr(defobj->tlsindex, def->st_value));
#else
ti.ti_module = defobj->tlsindex;
ti.ti_offset = def->st_value;
return (__tls_get_addr(&ti));
#endif
} else
return (defobj->relocbase + def->st_value);
}
_rtld_error("Undefined symbol \"%s\"", name);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return NULL;
}
void *
dlsym(void *handle, const char *name)
{
return do_dlsym(handle, name, __builtin_return_address(0), NULL,
SYMLOOK_DLSYM);
}
dlfunc_t
dlfunc(void *handle, const char *name)
{
union {
void *d;
dlfunc_t f;
} rv;
rv.d = do_dlsym(handle, name, __builtin_return_address(0), NULL,
SYMLOOK_DLSYM);
return (rv.f);
}
void *
dlvsym(void *handle, const char *name, const char *version)
{
Ver_Entry ventry;
ventry.name = version;
ventry.file = NULL;
ventry.hash = elf_hash(version);
ventry.flags= 0;
return do_dlsym(handle, name, __builtin_return_address(0), &ventry,
SYMLOOK_DLSYM);
}
int
_rtld_addr_phdr(const void *addr, struct dl_phdr_info *phdr_info)
{
const Obj_Entry *obj;
RtldLockState lockstate;
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
obj = obj_from_addr(addr);
if (obj == NULL) {
_rtld_error("No shared object contains address");
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return (0);
}
rtld_fill_dl_phdr_info(obj, phdr_info);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return (1);
}
int
dladdr(const void *addr, Dl_info *info)
{
const Obj_Entry *obj;
const Elf_Sym *def;
void *symbol_addr;
unsigned long symoffset;
RtldLockState lockstate;
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
obj = obj_from_addr(addr);
if (obj == NULL) {
_rtld_error("No shared object contains address");
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return 0;
}
info->dli_fname = obj->path;
info->dli_fbase = obj->mapbase;
info->dli_saddr = (void *)0;
info->dli_sname = NULL;
/*
1999-04-07 02:48:43 +00:00
* Walk the symbol list looking for the symbol whose address is
* closest to the address sent in.
*/
for (symoffset = 0; symoffset < obj->dynsymcount; symoffset++) {
def = obj->symtab + symoffset;
/*
* For skip the symbol if st_shndx is either SHN_UNDEF or
* SHN_COMMON.
*/
if (def->st_shndx == SHN_UNDEF || def->st_shndx == SHN_COMMON)
continue;
/*
1999-04-07 02:48:43 +00:00
* If the symbol is greater than the specified address, or if it
* is further away from addr than the current nearest symbol,
* then reject it.
*/
symbol_addr = obj->relocbase + def->st_value;
if (symbol_addr > addr || symbol_addr < info->dli_saddr)
continue;
/* Update our idea of the nearest symbol. */
info->dli_sname = obj->strtab + def->st_name;
info->dli_saddr = symbol_addr;
/* Exact match? */
if (info->dli_saddr == addr)
break;
}
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return 1;
}
int
dlinfo(void *handle, int request, void *p)
{
const Obj_Entry *obj;
RtldLockState lockstate;
int error;
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
if (handle == NULL || handle == RTLD_SELF) {
void *retaddr;
retaddr = __builtin_return_address(0); /* __GNUC__ only */
if ((obj = obj_from_addr(retaddr)) == NULL)
_rtld_error("Cannot determine caller's shared object");
} else
obj = dlcheck(handle);
if (obj == NULL) {
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return (-1);
}
error = 0;
switch (request) {
case RTLD_DI_LINKMAP:
*((struct link_map const **)p) = &obj->linkmap;
break;
case RTLD_DI_ORIGIN:
error = rtld_dirname(obj->path, p);
break;
case RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE:
case RTLD_DI_SERINFO:
error = do_search_info(obj, request, (struct dl_serinfo *)p);
break;
default:
_rtld_error("Invalid request %d passed to dlinfo()", request);
error = -1;
}
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
return (error);
}
static void
rtld_fill_dl_phdr_info(const Obj_Entry *obj, struct dl_phdr_info *phdr_info)
{
phdr_info->dlpi_addr = (Elf_Addr)obj->relocbase;
phdr_info->dlpi_name = STAILQ_FIRST(&obj->names) ?
STAILQ_FIRST(&obj->names)->name : obj->path;
phdr_info->dlpi_phdr = obj->phdr;
phdr_info->dlpi_phnum = obj->phsize / sizeof(obj->phdr[0]);
phdr_info->dlpi_tls_modid = obj->tlsindex;
phdr_info->dlpi_tls_data = obj->tlsinit;
phdr_info->dlpi_adds = obj_loads;
phdr_info->dlpi_subs = obj_loads - obj_count;
}
int
dl_iterate_phdr(__dl_iterate_hdr_callback callback, void *param)
{
struct dl_phdr_info phdr_info;
const Obj_Entry *obj;
RtldLockState bind_lockstate, phdr_lockstate;
int error;
wlock_acquire(rtld_phdr_lock, &phdr_lockstate);
rlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &bind_lockstate);
error = 0;
for (obj = obj_list; obj != NULL; obj = obj->next) {
rtld_fill_dl_phdr_info(obj, &phdr_info);
if ((error = callback(&phdr_info, sizeof phdr_info, param)) != 0)
break;
}
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &bind_lockstate);
lock_release(rtld_phdr_lock, &phdr_lockstate);
return (error);
}
static void *
fill_search_info(const char *dir, size_t dirlen, void *param)
{
struct fill_search_info_args *arg;
arg = param;
if (arg->request == RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE) {
arg->serinfo->dls_cnt ++;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
arg->serinfo->dls_size += sizeof(struct dl_serpath) + dirlen + 1;
} else {
struct dl_serpath *s_entry;
s_entry = arg->serpath;
s_entry->dls_name = arg->strspace;
s_entry->dls_flags = arg->flags;
strncpy(arg->strspace, dir, dirlen);
arg->strspace[dirlen] = '\0';
arg->strspace += dirlen + 1;
arg->serpath++;
}
return (NULL);
}
static int
do_search_info(const Obj_Entry *obj, int request, struct dl_serinfo *info)
{
struct dl_serinfo _info;
struct fill_search_info_args args;
args.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE;
args.serinfo = &_info;
_info.dls_size = __offsetof(struct dl_serinfo, dls_serpath);
_info.dls_cnt = 0;
path_enumerate(obj->rpath, fill_search_info, &args);
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
path_enumerate(ld_library_path, fill_search_info, &args);
path_enumerate(obj->runpath, fill_search_info, &args);
path_enumerate(gethints(obj->z_nodeflib), fill_search_info, &args);
if (!obj->z_nodeflib)
path_enumerate(STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH, fill_search_info, &args);
if (request == RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE) {
info->dls_size = _info.dls_size;
info->dls_cnt = _info.dls_cnt;
return (0);
}
if (info->dls_cnt != _info.dls_cnt || info->dls_size != _info.dls_size) {
_rtld_error("Uninitialized Dl_serinfo struct passed to dlinfo()");
return (-1);
}
args.request = RTLD_DI_SERINFO;
args.serinfo = info;
args.serpath = &info->dls_serpath[0];
args.strspace = (char *)&info->dls_serpath[_info.dls_cnt];
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
args.flags = LA_SER_RUNPATH;
if (path_enumerate(obj->rpath, fill_search_info, &args) != NULL)
return (-1);
args.flags = LA_SER_LIBPATH;
if (path_enumerate(ld_library_path, fill_search_info, &args) != NULL)
return (-1);
args.flags = LA_SER_RUNPATH;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (path_enumerate(obj->runpath, fill_search_info, &args) != NULL)
return (-1);
args.flags = LA_SER_CONFIG;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (path_enumerate(gethints(obj->z_nodeflib), fill_search_info, &args)
!= NULL)
return (-1);
args.flags = LA_SER_DEFAULT;
Import the DragonFly BSD commit 4f0bc915b65fcf5a23214f6d221d65c80be68ad4 by John Marino <draco@marino.st>, with the following (edited) commit message Date: Sat, 24 Mar 2012 06:40:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH 1/1] rtld: Implement DT_RUNPATH and -z nodefaultlib DT_RUNPATH is incorrectly being considered as an alias of DT_RPATH. The purpose of DT_RUNPATH is to have two different types of rpath: one that can be overridden by the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH and one that can't. With the currently implementation, LD_LIBRARY_PATH will always trump any embedded rpath or runpath tags. Current path search order by rtld: ================================== LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RPATH / DT_RUNPATH (always the same) ldconfig hints file (default: /var/run/ld-elf.so.hints) /usr/lib New path search order by rtld: ============================== DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file /usr/lib The new path search matches how the linux runtime loader works. The other major added feature is support for linker flag "-z nodefaultlib". When this flag is passed to the linker, rtld will skip all references to the standard library search path ("/usr/lib" in this case but it could handle more color delimited paths) except in DT_RPATH and DT_RUNPATH. New path search order by rtld with -z nodefaultlib flag set: ============================================================ DT_RPATH of the calling object if no DT_RUNPATH DT_RPATH of the main binary if no DT_RUNPATH and binary isn't calling obj LD_LIBRARY_PATH DT_RUNPATH ldconfig hints file (skips all references to /usr/lib) FreeBSD notes: - we fixed some bugs which were submitted to DragonFly and merged there as commit 1ff8a2bd3eb6e5587174c6a983303ea3a79e0002; - we added LD_LIBRARY_PATH_RPATH environment variable to switch to the previous behaviour of considering DT_RPATH a synonym for DT_RUNPATH; - the FreeBSD default search path is /lib:/usr/lib and not /usr/lib. Reviewed by: kan MFC after: 1 month MFC note: flip the ld_library_path_rpath default value for stable/9
2012-07-15 10:53:48 +00:00
if (!obj->z_nodeflib &&
path_enumerate(STANDARD_LIBRARY_PATH, fill_search_info, &args) != NULL)
return (-1);
return (0);
}
static int
rtld_dirname(const char *path, char *bname)
{
const char *endp;
/* Empty or NULL string gets treated as "." */
if (path == NULL || *path == '\0') {
bname[0] = '.';
2003-02-13 22:47:41 +00:00
bname[1] = '\0';
return (0);
}
/* Strip trailing slashes */
endp = path + strlen(path) - 1;
while (endp > path && *endp == '/')
endp--;
/* Find the start of the dir */
while (endp > path && *endp != '/')
endp--;
/* Either the dir is "/" or there are no slashes */
if (endp == path) {
bname[0] = *endp == '/' ? '/' : '.';
bname[1] = '\0';
return (0);
} else {
do {
endp--;
} while (endp > path && *endp == '/');
}
if (endp - path + 2 > PATH_MAX)
{
_rtld_error("Filename is too long: %s", path);
return(-1);
}
strncpy(bname, path, endp - path + 1);
bname[endp - path + 1] = '\0';
return (0);
}
static int
rtld_dirname_abs(const char *path, char *base)
{
char base_rel[PATH_MAX];
if (rtld_dirname(path, base) == -1)
return (-1);
if (base[0] == '/')
return (0);
if (getcwd(base_rel, sizeof(base_rel)) == NULL ||
strlcat(base_rel, "/", sizeof(base_rel)) >= sizeof(base_rel) ||
strlcat(base_rel, base, sizeof(base_rel)) >= sizeof(base_rel))
return (-1);
strcpy(base, base_rel);
return (0);
}
static void
linkmap_add(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
struct link_map *l = &obj->linkmap;
struct link_map *prev;
obj->linkmap.l_name = obj->path;
obj->linkmap.l_addr = obj->mapbase;
obj->linkmap.l_ld = obj->dynamic;
#ifdef __mips__
/* GDB needs load offset on MIPS to use the symbols */
obj->linkmap.l_offs = obj->relocbase;
#endif
if (r_debug.r_map == NULL) {
r_debug.r_map = l;
return;
}
/*
* Scan to the end of the list, but not past the entry for the
* dynamic linker, which we want to keep at the very end.
*/
for (prev = r_debug.r_map;
prev->l_next != NULL && prev->l_next != &obj_rtld.linkmap;
prev = prev->l_next)
;
/* Link in the new entry. */
l->l_prev = prev;
l->l_next = prev->l_next;
if (l->l_next != NULL)
l->l_next->l_prev = l;
prev->l_next = l;
}
static void
linkmap_delete(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
struct link_map *l = &obj->linkmap;
if (l->l_prev == NULL) {
if ((r_debug.r_map = l->l_next) != NULL)
l->l_next->l_prev = NULL;
return;
}
if ((l->l_prev->l_next = l->l_next) != NULL)
l->l_next->l_prev = l->l_prev;
}
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
/*
* Function for the debugger to set a breakpoint on to gain control.
*
* The two parameters allow the debugger to easily find and determine
* what the runtime loader is doing and to whom it is doing it.
*
* When the loadhook trap is hit (r_debug_state, set at program
* initialization), the arguments can be found on the stack:
*
* +8 struct link_map *m
* +4 struct r_debug *rd
* +0 RetAddr
*/
void
r_debug_state(struct r_debug* rd, struct link_map *m)
{
/*
* The following is a hack to force the compiler to emit calls to
* this function, even when optimizing. If the function is empty,
* the compiler is not obliged to emit any code for calls to it,
* even when marked __noinline. However, gdb depends on those
* calls being made.
*/
__asm __volatile("" : : : "memory");
}
/*
* Get address of the pointer variable in the main program.
* Prefer non-weak symbol over the weak one.
*/
static const void **
get_program_var_addr(const char *name, RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
SymLook req;
DoneList donelist;
symlook_init(&req, name);
req.lockstate = lockstate;
donelist_init(&donelist);
if (symlook_global(&req, &donelist) != 0)
return (NULL);
if (ELF_ST_TYPE(req.sym_out->st_info) == STT_FUNC)
return ((const void **)make_function_pointer(req.sym_out,
req.defobj_out));
else if (ELF_ST_TYPE(req.sym_out->st_info) == STT_GNU_IFUNC)
return ((const void **)rtld_resolve_ifunc(req.defobj_out, req.sym_out));
else
return ((const void **)(req.defobj_out->relocbase +
req.sym_out->st_value));
}
/*
* Set a pointer variable in the main program to the given value. This
* is used to set key variables such as "environ" before any of the
* init functions are called.
*/
static void
set_program_var(const char *name, const void *value)
{
const void **addr;
if ((addr = get_program_var_addr(name, NULL)) != NULL) {
dbg("\"%s\": *%p <-- %p", name, addr, value);
*addr = value;
}
}
/*
* Search the global objects, including dependencies and main object,
* for the given symbol.
*/
static int
symlook_global(SymLook *req, DoneList *donelist)
{
SymLook req1;
const Objlist_Entry *elm;
int res;
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
/* Search all objects loaded at program start up. */
if (req->defobj_out == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req->sym_out->st_info) == STB_WEAK) {
res = symlook_list(&req1, &list_main, donelist);
if (res == 0 && (req->defobj_out == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req1.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK)) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
assert(req->defobj_out != NULL);
}
}
/* Search all DAGs whose roots are RTLD_GLOBAL objects. */
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &list_global, link) {
if (req->defobj_out != NULL &&
ELF_ST_BIND(req->sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK)
break;
res = symlook_list(&req1, &elm->obj->dagmembers, donelist);
if (res == 0 && (req->defobj_out == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req1.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK)) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
assert(req->defobj_out != NULL);
}
}
return (req->sym_out != NULL ? 0 : ESRCH);
}
/*
* Given a symbol name in a referencing object, find the corresponding
* definition of the symbol. Returns a pointer to the symbol, or NULL if
* no definition was found. Returns a pointer to the Obj_Entry of the
* defining object via the reference parameter DEFOBJ_OUT.
*/
static int
symlook_default(SymLook *req, const Obj_Entry *refobj)
{
DoneList donelist;
const Objlist_Entry *elm;
SymLook req1;
int res;
donelist_init(&donelist);
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
/* Look first in the referencing object if linked symbolically. */
if (refobj->symbolic && !donelist_check(&donelist, refobj)) {
res = symlook_obj(&req1, refobj);
if (res == 0) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
assert(req->defobj_out != NULL);
}
}
symlook_global(req, &donelist);
/* Search all dlopened DAGs containing the referencing object. */
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &refobj->dldags, link) {
if (req->sym_out != NULL &&
ELF_ST_BIND(req->sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK)
break;
res = symlook_list(&req1, &elm->obj->dagmembers, &donelist);
if (res == 0 && (req->sym_out == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req1.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK)) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
assert(req->defobj_out != NULL);
}
}
/*
* Search the dynamic linker itself, and possibly resolve the
* symbol from there. This is how the application links to
* dynamic linker services such as dlopen.
*/
if (req->sym_out == NULL ||
ELF_ST_BIND(req->sym_out->st_info) == STB_WEAK) {
res = symlook_obj(&req1, &obj_rtld);
if (res == 0) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
assert(req->defobj_out != NULL);
}
}
return (req->sym_out != NULL ? 0 : ESRCH);
}
static int
symlook_list(SymLook *req, const Objlist *objlist, DoneList *dlp)
{
const Elf_Sym *def;
const Obj_Entry *defobj;
const Objlist_Entry *elm;
SymLook req1;
int res;
def = NULL;
defobj = NULL;
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, objlist, link) {
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
if (donelist_check(dlp, elm->obj))
continue;
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
if ((res = symlook_obj(&req1, elm->obj)) == 0) {
if (def == NULL || ELF_ST_BIND(req1.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK) {
def = req1.sym_out;
defobj = req1.defobj_out;
if (ELF_ST_BIND(def->st_info) != STB_WEAK)
break;
}
}
}
if (def != NULL) {
req->sym_out = def;
req->defobj_out = defobj;
return (0);
}
return (ESRCH);
}
/*
* Search the chain of DAGS cointed to by the given Needed_Entry
* for a symbol of the given name. Each DAG is scanned completely
* before advancing to the next one. Returns a pointer to the symbol,
* or NULL if no definition was found.
*/
static int
symlook_needed(SymLook *req, const Needed_Entry *needed, DoneList *dlp)
{
const Elf_Sym *def;
const Needed_Entry *n;
const Obj_Entry *defobj;
SymLook req1;
int res;
def = NULL;
defobj = NULL;
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
for (n = needed; n != NULL; n = n->next) {
if (n->obj == NULL ||
(res = symlook_list(&req1, &n->obj->dagmembers, dlp)) != 0)
continue;
if (def == NULL || ELF_ST_BIND(req1.sym_out->st_info) != STB_WEAK) {
def = req1.sym_out;
defobj = req1.defobj_out;
if (ELF_ST_BIND(def->st_info) != STB_WEAK)
break;
}
}
if (def != NULL) {
req->sym_out = def;
req->defobj_out = defobj;
return (0);
}
return (ESRCH);
}
/*
* Search the symbol table of a single shared object for a symbol of
* the given name and version, if requested. Returns a pointer to the
* symbol, or NULL if no definition was found. If the object is
* filter, return filtered symbol from filtee.
*
* The symbol's hash value is passed in for efficiency reasons; that
* eliminates many recomputations of the hash value.
*/
int
symlook_obj(SymLook *req, const Obj_Entry *obj)
{
DoneList donelist;
SymLook req1;
int flags, res, mres;
/*
* If there is at least one valid hash at this point, we prefer to
* use the faster GNU version if available.
*/
if (obj->valid_hash_gnu)
mres = symlook_obj1_gnu(req, obj);
else if (obj->valid_hash_sysv)
mres = symlook_obj1_sysv(req, obj);
else
return (EINVAL);
if (mres == 0) {
if (obj->needed_filtees != NULL) {
flags = (req->flags & SYMLOOK_EARLY) ? RTLD_LO_EARLY : 0;
load_filtees(__DECONST(Obj_Entry *, obj), flags, req->lockstate);
donelist_init(&donelist);
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
res = symlook_needed(&req1, obj->needed_filtees, &donelist);
if (res == 0) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
}
return (res);
}
if (obj->needed_aux_filtees != NULL) {
flags = (req->flags & SYMLOOK_EARLY) ? RTLD_LO_EARLY : 0;
load_filtees(__DECONST(Obj_Entry *, obj), flags, req->lockstate);
donelist_init(&donelist);
symlook_init_from_req(&req1, req);
res = symlook_needed(&req1, obj->needed_aux_filtees, &donelist);
if (res == 0) {
req->sym_out = req1.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = req1.defobj_out;
return (res);
}
}
}
return (mres);
}
/* Symbol match routine common to both hash functions */
static bool
matched_symbol(SymLook *req, const Obj_Entry *obj, Sym_Match_Result *result,
const unsigned long symnum)
{
Elf_Versym verndx;
const Elf_Sym *symp;
const char *strp;
symp = obj->symtab + symnum;
strp = obj->strtab + symp->st_name;
switch (ELF_ST_TYPE(symp->st_info)) {
case STT_FUNC:
case STT_NOTYPE:
case STT_OBJECT:
case STT_COMMON:
case STT_GNU_IFUNC:
if (symp->st_value == 0)
return (false);
/* fallthrough */
case STT_TLS:
if (symp->st_shndx != SHN_UNDEF)
break;
#ifndef __mips__
else if (((req->flags & SYMLOOK_IN_PLT) == 0) &&
(ELF_ST_TYPE(symp->st_info) == STT_FUNC))
break;
/* fallthrough */
#endif
default:
return (false);
}
if (req->name[0] != strp[0] || strcmp(req->name, strp) != 0)
return (false);
if (req->ventry == NULL) {
if (obj->versyms != NULL) {
verndx = VER_NDX(obj->versyms[symnum]);
if (verndx > obj->vernum) {
_rtld_error(
"%s: symbol %s references wrong version %d",
obj->path, obj->strtab + symnum, verndx);
return (false);
}
/*
* If we are not called from dlsym (i.e. this
* is a normal relocation from unversioned
* binary), accept the symbol immediately if
* it happens to have first version after this
* shared object became versioned. Otherwise,
* if symbol is versioned and not hidden,
* remember it. If it is the only symbol with
* this name exported by the shared object, it
* will be returned as a match by the calling
* function. If symbol is global (verndx < 2)
* accept it unconditionally.
*/
if ((req->flags & SYMLOOK_DLSYM) == 0 &&
verndx == VER_NDX_GIVEN) {
result->sym_out = symp;
return (true);
}
else if (verndx >= VER_NDX_GIVEN) {
if ((obj->versyms[symnum] & VER_NDX_HIDDEN)
== 0) {
if (result->vsymp == NULL)
result->vsymp = symp;
result->vcount++;
}
return (false);
}
}
result->sym_out = symp;
return (true);
}
if (obj->versyms == NULL) {
if (object_match_name(obj, req->ventry->name)) {
_rtld_error("%s: object %s should provide version %s "
"for symbol %s", obj_rtld.path, obj->path,
req->ventry->name, obj->strtab + symnum);
return (false);
}
} else {
verndx = VER_NDX(obj->versyms[symnum]);
if (verndx > obj->vernum) {
_rtld_error("%s: symbol %s references wrong version %d",
obj->path, obj->strtab + symnum, verndx);
return (false);
}
if (obj->vertab[verndx].hash != req->ventry->hash ||
strcmp(obj->vertab[verndx].name, req->ventry->name)) {
/*
* Version does not match. Look if this is a
* global symbol and if it is not hidden. If
* global symbol (verndx < 2) is available,
* use it. Do not return symbol if we are
* called by dlvsym, because dlvsym looks for
* a specific version and default one is not
* what dlvsym wants.
*/
if ((req->flags & SYMLOOK_DLSYM) ||
(verndx >= VER_NDX_GIVEN) ||
(obj->versyms[symnum] & VER_NDX_HIDDEN))
return (false);
}
}
result->sym_out = symp;
return (true);
}
/*
* Search for symbol using SysV hash function.
* obj->buckets is known not to be NULL at this point; the test for this was
* performed with the obj->valid_hash_sysv assignment.
*/
static int
symlook_obj1_sysv(SymLook *req, const Obj_Entry *obj)
{
unsigned long symnum;
Sym_Match_Result matchres;
matchres.sym_out = NULL;
matchres.vsymp = NULL;
matchres.vcount = 0;
for (symnum = obj->buckets[req->hash % obj->nbuckets];
symnum != STN_UNDEF; symnum = obj->chains[symnum]) {
if (symnum >= obj->nchains)
return (ESRCH); /* Bad object */
if (matched_symbol(req, obj, &matchres, symnum)) {
req->sym_out = matchres.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = obj;
return (0);
}
}
if (matchres.vcount == 1) {
req->sym_out = matchres.vsymp;
req->defobj_out = obj;
return (0);
}
return (ESRCH);
}
/* Search for symbol using GNU hash function */
static int
symlook_obj1_gnu(SymLook *req, const Obj_Entry *obj)
{
Elf_Addr bloom_word;
const Elf32_Word *hashval;
Elf32_Word bucket;
Sym_Match_Result matchres;
unsigned int h1, h2;
unsigned long symnum;
matchres.sym_out = NULL;
matchres.vsymp = NULL;
matchres.vcount = 0;
/* Pick right bitmask word from Bloom filter array */
bloom_word = obj->bloom_gnu[(req->hash_gnu / __ELF_WORD_SIZE) &
obj->maskwords_bm_gnu];
/* Calculate modulus word size of gnu hash and its derivative */
h1 = req->hash_gnu & (__ELF_WORD_SIZE - 1);
h2 = ((req->hash_gnu >> obj->shift2_gnu) & (__ELF_WORD_SIZE - 1));
/* Filter out the "definitely not in set" queries */
if (((bloom_word >> h1) & (bloom_word >> h2) & 1) == 0)
return (ESRCH);
/* Locate hash chain and corresponding value element*/
bucket = obj->buckets_gnu[req->hash_gnu % obj->nbuckets_gnu];
if (bucket == 0)
return (ESRCH);
hashval = &obj->chain_zero_gnu[bucket];
do {
if (((*hashval ^ req->hash_gnu) >> 1) == 0) {
symnum = hashval - obj->chain_zero_gnu;
if (matched_symbol(req, obj, &matchres, symnum)) {
req->sym_out = matchres.sym_out;
req->defobj_out = obj;
return (0);
}
}
} while ((*hashval++ & 1) == 0);
if (matchres.vcount == 1) {
req->sym_out = matchres.vsymp;
req->defobj_out = obj;
return (0);
}
return (ESRCH);
}
static void
trace_loaded_objects(Obj_Entry *obj)
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
{
char *fmt1, *fmt2, *fmt, *main_local, *list_containers;
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
int c;
if ((main_local = getenv(LD_ "TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_PROGNAME")) == NULL)
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main_local = "";
if ((fmt1 = getenv(LD_ "TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_FMT1")) == NULL)
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
fmt1 = "\t%o => %p (%x)\n";
if ((fmt2 = getenv(LD_ "TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_FMT2")) == NULL)
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fmt2 = "\t%o (%x)\n";
list_containers = getenv(LD_ "TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_ALL");
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
for (; obj; obj = obj->next) {
Needed_Entry *needed;
char *name, *path;
bool is_lib;
if (list_containers && obj->needed != NULL)
rtld_printf("%s:\n", obj->path);
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for (needed = obj->needed; needed; needed = needed->next) {
if (needed->obj != NULL) {
if (needed->obj->traced && !list_containers)
continue;
needed->obj->traced = true;
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
path = needed->obj->path;
} else
path = "not found";
name = (char *)obj->strtab + needed->name;
is_lib = strncmp(name, "lib", 3) == 0; /* XXX - bogus */
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fmt = is_lib ? fmt1 : fmt2;
while ((c = *fmt++) != '\0') {
switch (c) {
default:
rtld_putchar(c);
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continue;
case '\\':
switch (c = *fmt) {
case '\0':
continue;
case 'n':
rtld_putchar('\n');
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break;
case 't':
rtld_putchar('\t');
1998-05-01 08:39:27 +00:00
break;
}
break;
case '%':
switch (c = *fmt) {
case '\0':
continue;
case '%':
default:
rtld_putchar(c);
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break;
case 'A':
rtld_putstr(main_local);
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break;
case 'a':
rtld_putstr(obj_main->path);
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break;
case 'o':
rtld_putstr(name);
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break;
#if 0
case 'm':
rtld_printf("%d", sodp->sod_major);
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break;
case 'n':
rtld_printf("%d", sodp->sod_minor);
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break;
#endif
case 'p':
rtld_putstr(path);
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break;
case 'x':
rtld_printf("%p", needed->obj ? needed->obj->mapbase :
0);
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break;
}
break;
}
++fmt;
}
}
}
}
/*
* Unload a dlopened object and its dependencies from memory and from
* our data structures. It is assumed that the DAG rooted in the
* object has already been unreferenced, and that the object has a
* reference count of 0.
*/
static void
unload_object(Obj_Entry *root)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
Obj_Entry **linkp;
assert(root->refcount == 0);
/*
* Pass over the DAG removing unreferenced objects from
* appropriate lists.
*/
unlink_object(root);
/* Unmap all objects that are no longer referenced. */
linkp = &obj_list->next;
while ((obj = *linkp) != NULL) {
if (obj->refcount == 0) {
LD_UTRACE(UTRACE_UNLOAD_OBJECT, obj, obj->mapbase, obj->mapsize, 0,
obj->path);
dbg("unloading \"%s\"", obj->path);
unload_filtees(root);
munmap(obj->mapbase, obj->mapsize);
linkmap_delete(obj);
*linkp = obj->next;
Solve the dynamic linker's problems with multithreaded programs once and for all (I hope). Packages such as wine, JDK, and linuxthreads should no longer have any problems with re-entering the dynamic linker. This commit replaces the locking used in the dynamic linker with a new spinlock-based reader/writer lock implementation. Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green> argued for this from the very beginning, but it took me a long time to come around to his point of view. Spinlocks are the only kinds of locks that work with all thread packages. But on uniprocessor systems they can be inefficient, because while a contender for the lock is spinning the holder of the lock cannot make any progress toward releasing it. To alleviate this disadvantage I have borrowed a trick from Sleepycat's Berkeley DB implementation. When spinning for a lock, the requester does a nanosleep() call for 1 usec. each time around the loop. This will generally yield the CPU to other threads, allowing the lock holder to finish its business and release the lock. I chose 1 usec. as the minimum sleep which would with reasonable certainty not be rounded down to 0. The formerly machine-independent file "lockdflt.c" has been moved into the architecture-specific subdirectories by repository copy. It now contains the machine-dependent spinlocking code. For the spinlocks I used the very nifty "simple, non-scalable reader-preference lock" which I found at <http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/scott/synchronization/pseudocode/rw.html> on all CPUs except the 80386 (the specific CPU model, not the architecture). The 80386 CPU doesn't support the necessary "cmpxchg" instruction, so on that CPU a simple exclusive test-and-set lock is used instead. 80386 CPUs are detected at initialization time by trying to execute "cmpxchg" and catching the resulting SIGILL signal. To reduce contention for the locks, I have revamped a couple of key data structures, permitting all common operations to be done under non-exclusive (reader) locking. The only operations that require exclusive locking now are the rare intrusive operations such as dlopen() and dlclose(). The dllockinit() interface is now deprecated. It still exists, but only as a do-nothing stub. I plan to remove it as soon as is reasonably possible. (From the very beginning it was clearly labeled as experimental and subject to change.) As far as I know, only the linuxthreads port uses dllockinit(). This interface turned out to have several problems. As one example, when the dynamic linker called a client-supplied locking function, that function sometimes needed lazy binding, causing re-entry into the dynamic linker and a big looping mess. And in any case, it turned out to be too burdensome to require threads packages to register themselves with the dynamic linker.
2000-07-08 04:10:38 +00:00
obj_count--;
obj_free(obj);
} else
linkp = &obj->next;
}
obj_tail = linkp;
}
static void
unlink_object(Obj_Entry *root)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
if (root->refcount == 0) {
/* Remove the object from the RTLD_GLOBAL list. */
objlist_remove(&list_global, root);
/* Remove the object from all objects' DAG lists. */
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link) {
objlist_remove(&elm->obj->dldags, root);
if (elm->obj != root)
unlink_object(elm->obj);
}
}
}
static void
ref_dag(Obj_Entry *root)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
assert(root->dag_inited);
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link)
elm->obj->refcount++;
}
static void
unref_dag(Obj_Entry *root)
{
Objlist_Entry *elm;
assert(root->dag_inited);
STAILQ_FOREACH(elm, &root->dagmembers, link)
elm->obj->refcount--;
}
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/*
* Common code for MD __tls_get_addr().
*/
static void *tls_get_addr_slow(Elf_Addr **, int, size_t) __noinline;
static void *
tls_get_addr_slow(Elf_Addr **dtvp, int index, size_t offset)
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{
Elf_Addr *newdtv, *dtv;
RtldLockState lockstate;
int to_copy;
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dtv = *dtvp;
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/* Check dtv generation in case new modules have arrived */
if (dtv[0] != tls_dtv_generation) {
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
newdtv = xcalloc(tls_max_index + 2, sizeof(Elf_Addr));
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to_copy = dtv[1];
if (to_copy > tls_max_index)
to_copy = tls_max_index;
memcpy(&newdtv[2], &dtv[2], to_copy * sizeof(Elf_Addr));
newdtv[0] = tls_dtv_generation;
newdtv[1] = tls_max_index;
free(dtv);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
dtv = *dtvp = newdtv;
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}
/* Dynamically allocate module TLS if necessary */
if (dtv[index + 1] == 0) {
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/* Signal safe, wlock will block out signals. */
wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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if (!dtv[index + 1])
dtv[index + 1] = (Elf_Addr)allocate_module_tls(index);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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}
return ((void *)(dtv[index + 1] + offset));
}
void *
tls_get_addr_common(Elf_Addr **dtvp, int index, size_t offset)
{
Elf_Addr *dtv;
dtv = *dtvp;
/* Check dtv generation in case new modules have arrived */
if (__predict_true(dtv[0] == tls_dtv_generation &&
dtv[index + 1] != 0))
return ((void *)(dtv[index + 1] + offset));
return (tls_get_addr_slow(dtvp, index, offset));
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}
#if defined(__arm__) || defined(__ia64__) || defined(__mips__) || defined(__powerpc__)
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/*
* Allocate Static TLS using the Variant I method.
*/
void *
allocate_tls(Obj_Entry *objs, void *oldtcb, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
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{
Obj_Entry *obj;
char *tcb;
Elf_Addr **tls;
Elf_Addr *dtv;
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Elf_Addr addr;
int i;
if (oldtcb != NULL && tcbsize == TLS_TCB_SIZE)
return (oldtcb);
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assert(tcbsize >= TLS_TCB_SIZE);
tcb = xcalloc(1, tls_static_space - TLS_TCB_SIZE + tcbsize);
tls = (Elf_Addr **)(tcb + tcbsize - TLS_TCB_SIZE);
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if (oldtcb != NULL) {
memcpy(tls, oldtcb, tls_static_space);
free(oldtcb);
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/* Adjust the DTV. */
dtv = tls[0];
for (i = 0; i < dtv[1]; i++) {
if (dtv[i+2] >= (Elf_Addr)oldtcb &&
dtv[i+2] < (Elf_Addr)oldtcb + tls_static_space) {
dtv[i+2] = dtv[i+2] - (Elf_Addr)oldtcb + (Elf_Addr)tls;
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}
}
} else {
dtv = xcalloc(tls_max_index + 2, sizeof(Elf_Addr));
tls[0] = dtv;
dtv[0] = tls_dtv_generation;
dtv[1] = tls_max_index;
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for (obj = objs; obj; obj = obj->next) {
if (obj->tlsoffset > 0) {
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addr = (Elf_Addr)tls + obj->tlsoffset;
if (obj->tlsinitsize > 0)
memcpy((void*) addr, obj->tlsinit, obj->tlsinitsize);
if (obj->tlssize > obj->tlsinitsize)
memset((void*) (addr + obj->tlsinitsize), 0,
obj->tlssize - obj->tlsinitsize);
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dtv[obj->tlsindex + 1] = addr;
}
}
}
return (tcb);
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}
void
free_tls(void *tcb, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
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{
Elf_Addr *dtv;
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Elf_Addr tlsstart, tlsend;
int dtvsize, i;
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assert(tcbsize >= TLS_TCB_SIZE);
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tlsstart = (Elf_Addr)tcb + tcbsize - TLS_TCB_SIZE;
tlsend = tlsstart + tls_static_space;
dtv = *(Elf_Addr **)tlsstart;
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dtvsize = dtv[1];
for (i = 0; i < dtvsize; i++) {
if (dtv[i+2] && (dtv[i+2] < tlsstart || dtv[i+2] >= tlsend)) {
free((void*)dtv[i+2]);
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}
}
free(dtv);
free(tcb);
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}
#endif
#if defined(__i386__) || defined(__amd64__) || defined(__sparc64__)
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/*
* Allocate Static TLS using the Variant II method.
*/
void *
allocate_tls(Obj_Entry *objs, void *oldtls, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
{
Obj_Entry *obj;
size_t size;
char *tls;
Elf_Addr *dtv, *olddtv;
Elf_Addr segbase, oldsegbase, addr;
int i;
size = round(tls_static_space, tcbalign);
assert(tcbsize >= 2*sizeof(Elf_Addr));
tls = xcalloc(1, size + tcbsize);
dtv = xcalloc(tls_max_index + 2, sizeof(Elf_Addr));
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segbase = (Elf_Addr)(tls + size);
((Elf_Addr*)segbase)[0] = segbase;
((Elf_Addr*)segbase)[1] = (Elf_Addr) dtv;
dtv[0] = tls_dtv_generation;
dtv[1] = tls_max_index;
if (oldtls) {
/*
* Copy the static TLS block over whole.
*/
oldsegbase = (Elf_Addr) oldtls;
memcpy((void *)(segbase - tls_static_space),
(const void *)(oldsegbase - tls_static_space),
tls_static_space);
/*
* If any dynamic TLS blocks have been created tls_get_addr(),
* move them over.
*/
olddtv = ((Elf_Addr**)oldsegbase)[1];
for (i = 0; i < olddtv[1]; i++) {
if (olddtv[i+2] < oldsegbase - size || olddtv[i+2] > oldsegbase) {
dtv[i+2] = olddtv[i+2];
olddtv[i+2] = 0;
}
}
/*
* We assume that this block was the one we created with
* allocate_initial_tls().
*/
free_tls(oldtls, 2*sizeof(Elf_Addr), sizeof(Elf_Addr));
} else {
for (obj = objs; obj; obj = obj->next) {
if (obj->tlsoffset) {
addr = segbase - obj->tlsoffset;
memset((void*) (addr + obj->tlsinitsize),
0, obj->tlssize - obj->tlsinitsize);
if (obj->tlsinit)
memcpy((void*) addr, obj->tlsinit, obj->tlsinitsize);
dtv[obj->tlsindex + 1] = addr;
}
}
}
return (void*) segbase;
}
void
free_tls(void *tls, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
{
size_t size;
Elf_Addr* dtv;
int dtvsize, i;
Elf_Addr tlsstart, tlsend;
/*
* Figure out the size of the initial TLS block so that we can
* find stuff which ___tls_get_addr() allocated dynamically.
*/
size = round(tls_static_space, tcbalign);
dtv = ((Elf_Addr**)tls)[1];
dtvsize = dtv[1];
tlsend = (Elf_Addr) tls;
tlsstart = tlsend - size;
for (i = 0; i < dtvsize; i++) {
if (dtv[i+2] && (dtv[i+2] < tlsstart || dtv[i+2] > tlsend)) {
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free((void*) dtv[i+2]);
}
}
free((void*) tlsstart);
free((void*) dtv);
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}
#endif
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/*
* Allocate TLS block for module with given index.
*/
void *
allocate_module_tls(int index)
{
Obj_Entry* obj;
char* p;
for (obj = obj_list; obj; obj = obj->next) {
if (obj->tlsindex == index)
break;
}
if (!obj) {
_rtld_error("Can't find module with TLS index %d", index);
die();
}
p = malloc(obj->tlssize);
if (p == NULL) {
_rtld_error("Cannot allocate TLS block for index %d", index);
die();
}
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memcpy(p, obj->tlsinit, obj->tlsinitsize);
memset(p + obj->tlsinitsize, 0, obj->tlssize - obj->tlsinitsize);
return p;
}
bool
allocate_tls_offset(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
size_t off;
if (obj->tls_done)
return true;
if (obj->tlssize == 0) {
obj->tls_done = true;
return true;
}
if (obj->tlsindex == 1)
off = calculate_first_tls_offset(obj->tlssize, obj->tlsalign);
else
off = calculate_tls_offset(tls_last_offset, tls_last_size,
obj->tlssize, obj->tlsalign);
/*
* If we have already fixed the size of the static TLS block, we
* must stay within that size. When allocating the static TLS, we
* leave a small amount of space spare to be used for dynamically
* loading modules which use static TLS.
*/
if (tls_static_space) {
if (calculate_tls_end(off, obj->tlssize) > tls_static_space)
return false;
}
tls_last_offset = obj->tlsoffset = off;
tls_last_size = obj->tlssize;
obj->tls_done = true;
return true;
}
void
free_tls_offset(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
/*
* If we were the last thing to allocate out of the static TLS
* block, we give our space back to the 'allocator'. This is a
* simplistic workaround to allow libGL.so.1 to be loaded and
* unloaded multiple times.
*/
if (calculate_tls_end(obj->tlsoffset, obj->tlssize)
== calculate_tls_end(tls_last_offset, tls_last_size)) {
tls_last_offset -= obj->tlssize;
tls_last_size = 0;
}
}
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void *
_rtld_allocate_tls(void *oldtls, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
{
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void *ret;
RtldLockState lockstate;
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wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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ret = allocate_tls(obj_list, oldtls, tcbsize, tcbalign);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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return (ret);
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}
void
_rtld_free_tls(void *tcb, size_t tcbsize, size_t tcbalign)
{
RtldLockState lockstate;
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wlock_acquire(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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free_tls(tcb, tcbsize, tcbalign);
lock_release(rtld_bind_lock, &lockstate);
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}
static void
object_add_name(Obj_Entry *obj, const char *name)
{
Name_Entry *entry;
size_t len;
len = strlen(name);
entry = malloc(sizeof(Name_Entry) + len);
if (entry != NULL) {
strcpy(entry->name, name);
STAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&obj->names, entry, link);
}
}
static int
object_match_name(const Obj_Entry *obj, const char *name)
{
Name_Entry *entry;
STAILQ_FOREACH(entry, &obj->names, link) {
if (strcmp(name, entry->name) == 0)
return (1);
}
return (0);
}
static Obj_Entry *
locate_dependency(const Obj_Entry *obj, const char *name)
{
const Objlist_Entry *entry;
const Needed_Entry *needed;
STAILQ_FOREACH(entry, &list_main, link) {
if (object_match_name(entry->obj, name))
return entry->obj;
}
for (needed = obj->needed; needed != NULL; needed = needed->next) {
if (strcmp(obj->strtab + needed->name, name) == 0 ||
(needed->obj != NULL && object_match_name(needed->obj, name))) {
/*
* If there is DT_NEEDED for the name we are looking for,
* we are all set. Note that object might not be found if
* dependency was not loaded yet, so the function can
* return NULL here. This is expected and handled
* properly by the caller.
*/
return (needed->obj);
}
}
_rtld_error("%s: Unexpected inconsistency: dependency %s not found",
obj->path, name);
die();
}
static int
check_object_provided_version(Obj_Entry *refobj, const Obj_Entry *depobj,
const Elf_Vernaux *vna)
{
const Elf_Verdef *vd;
const char *vername;
vername = refobj->strtab + vna->vna_name;
vd = depobj->verdef;
if (vd == NULL) {
_rtld_error("%s: version %s required by %s not defined",
depobj->path, vername, refobj->path);
return (-1);
}
for (;;) {
if (vd->vd_version != VER_DEF_CURRENT) {
_rtld_error("%s: Unsupported version %d of Elf_Verdef entry",
depobj->path, vd->vd_version);
return (-1);
}
if (vna->vna_hash == vd->vd_hash) {
const Elf_Verdaux *aux = (const Elf_Verdaux *)
((char *)vd + vd->vd_aux);
if (strcmp(vername, depobj->strtab + aux->vda_name) == 0)
return (0);
}
if (vd->vd_next == 0)
break;
vd = (const Elf_Verdef *) ((char *)vd + vd->vd_next);
}
if (vna->vna_flags & VER_FLG_WEAK)
return (0);
_rtld_error("%s: version %s required by %s not found",
depobj->path, vername, refobj->path);
return (-1);
}
static int
rtld_verify_object_versions(Obj_Entry *obj)
{
const Elf_Verneed *vn;
const Elf_Verdef *vd;
const Elf_Verdaux *vda;
const Elf_Vernaux *vna;
const Obj_Entry *depobj;
int maxvernum, vernum;
if (obj->ver_checked)
return (0);
obj->ver_checked = true;
maxvernum = 0;
/*
* Walk over defined and required version records and figure out
* max index used by any of them. Do very basic sanity checking
* while there.
*/
vn = obj->verneed;
while (vn != NULL) {
if (vn->vn_version != VER_NEED_CURRENT) {
_rtld_error("%s: Unsupported version %d of Elf_Verneed entry",
obj->path, vn->vn_version);
return (-1);
}
vna = (const Elf_Vernaux *) ((char *)vn + vn->vn_aux);
for (;;) {
vernum = VER_NEED_IDX(vna->vna_other);
if (vernum > maxvernum)
maxvernum = vernum;
if (vna->vna_next == 0)
break;
vna = (const Elf_Vernaux *) ((char *)vna + vna->vna_next);
}
if (vn->vn_next == 0)
break;
vn = (const Elf_Verneed *) ((char *)vn + vn->vn_next);
}
vd = obj->verdef;
while (vd != NULL) {
if (vd->vd_version != VER_DEF_CURRENT) {
_rtld_error("%s: Unsupported version %d of Elf_Verdef entry",
obj->path, vd->vd_version);
return (-1);
}
vernum = VER_DEF_IDX(vd->vd_ndx);
if (vernum > maxvernum)
maxvernum = vernum;
if (vd->vd_next == 0)
break;
vd = (const Elf_Verdef *) ((char *)vd + vd->vd_next);
}
if (maxvernum == 0)
return (0);
/*
* Store version information in array indexable by version index.
* Verify that object version requirements are satisfied along the
* way.
*/
obj->vernum = maxvernum + 1;
obj->vertab = xcalloc(obj->vernum, sizeof(Ver_Entry));
vd = obj->verdef;
while (vd != NULL) {
if ((vd->vd_flags & VER_FLG_BASE) == 0) {
vernum = VER_DEF_IDX(vd->vd_ndx);
assert(vernum <= maxvernum);
vda = (const Elf_Verdaux *)((char *)vd + vd->vd_aux);
obj->vertab[vernum].hash = vd->vd_hash;
obj->vertab[vernum].name = obj->strtab + vda->vda_name;
obj->vertab[vernum].file = NULL;
obj->vertab[vernum].flags = 0;
}
if (vd->vd_next == 0)
break;
vd = (const Elf_Verdef *) ((char *)vd + vd->vd_next);
}
vn = obj->verneed;
while (vn != NULL) {
depobj = locate_dependency(obj, obj->strtab + vn->vn_file);
if (depobj == NULL)
return (-1);
vna = (const Elf_Vernaux *) ((char *)vn + vn->vn_aux);
for (;;) {
if (check_object_provided_version(obj, depobj, vna))
return (-1);
vernum = VER_NEED_IDX(vna->vna_other);
assert(vernum <= maxvernum);
obj->vertab[vernum].hash = vna->vna_hash;
obj->vertab[vernum].name = obj->strtab + vna->vna_name;
obj->vertab[vernum].file = obj->strtab + vn->vn_file;
obj->vertab[vernum].flags = (vna->vna_other & VER_NEED_HIDDEN) ?
VER_INFO_HIDDEN : 0;
if (vna->vna_next == 0)
break;
vna = (const Elf_Vernaux *) ((char *)vna + vna->vna_next);
}
if (vn->vn_next == 0)
break;
vn = (const Elf_Verneed *) ((char *)vn + vn->vn_next);
}
return 0;
}
static int
rtld_verify_versions(const Objlist *objlist)
{
Objlist_Entry *entry;
int rc;
rc = 0;
STAILQ_FOREACH(entry, objlist, link) {
/*
* Skip dummy objects or objects that have their version requirements
* already checked.
*/
if (entry->obj->strtab == NULL || entry->obj->vertab != NULL)
continue;
if (rtld_verify_object_versions(entry->obj) == -1) {
rc = -1;
if (ld_tracing == NULL)
break;
}
}
if (rc == 0 || ld_tracing != NULL)
rc = rtld_verify_object_versions(&obj_rtld);
return rc;
}
const Ver_Entry *
fetch_ventry(const Obj_Entry *obj, unsigned long symnum)
{
Elf_Versym vernum;
if (obj->vertab) {
vernum = VER_NDX(obj->versyms[symnum]);
if (vernum >= obj->vernum) {
_rtld_error("%s: symbol %s has wrong verneed value %d",
obj->path, obj->strtab + symnum, vernum);
} else if (obj->vertab[vernum].hash != 0) {
return &obj->vertab[vernum];
}
}
return NULL;
}
int
_rtld_get_stack_prot(void)
{
return (stack_prot);
}
static void
map_stacks_exec(RtldLockState *lockstate)
{
void (*thr_map_stacks_exec)(void);
if ((max_stack_flags & PF_X) == 0 || (stack_prot & PROT_EXEC) != 0)
return;
thr_map_stacks_exec = (void (*)(void))(uintptr_t)
get_program_var_addr("__pthread_map_stacks_exec", lockstate);
if (thr_map_stacks_exec != NULL) {
stack_prot |= PROT_EXEC;
thr_map_stacks_exec();
}
}
void
symlook_init(SymLook *dst, const char *name)
{
bzero(dst, sizeof(*dst));
dst->name = name;
dst->hash = elf_hash(name);
dst->hash_gnu = gnu_hash(name);
}
static void
symlook_init_from_req(SymLook *dst, const SymLook *src)
{
dst->name = src->name;
dst->hash = src->hash;
dst->hash_gnu = src->hash_gnu;
dst->ventry = src->ventry;
dst->flags = src->flags;
dst->defobj_out = NULL;
dst->sym_out = NULL;
dst->lockstate = src->lockstate;
}
/*
* Overrides for libc_pic-provided functions.
*/
int
__getosreldate(void)
{
size_t len;
int oid[2];
int error, osrel;
if (osreldate != 0)
return (osreldate);
oid[0] = CTL_KERN;
oid[1] = KERN_OSRELDATE;
osrel = 0;
len = sizeof(osrel);
error = sysctl(oid, 2, &osrel, &len, NULL, 0);
if (error == 0 && osrel > 0 && len == sizeof(osrel))
osreldate = osrel;
return (osreldate);
}
void
exit(int status)
{
_exit(status);
}
void (*__cleanup)(void);
int __isthreaded = 0;
int _thread_autoinit_dummy_decl = 1;
/*
* No unresolved symbols for rtld.
*/
void
__pthread_cxa_finalize(struct dl_phdr_info *a)
{
}
void
__stack_chk_fail(void)
{
_rtld_error("stack overflow detected; terminated");
die();
}
__weak_reference(__stack_chk_fail, __stack_chk_fail_local);
void
__chk_fail(void)
{
_rtld_error("buffer overflow detected; terminated");
die();
}
const char *
rtld_strerror(int errnum)
{
if (errnum < 0 || errnum >= sys_nerr)
return ("Unknown error");
return (sys_errlist[errnum]);
}