Commit Graph

202 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexander Kabaev
605f36fc1e No need to zero fill memory, mmapped anonymously. Kernel will
return pre-zeroed pages itself.

Noticed by:     jake
2003-03-14 21:10:13 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
fa4a502e77 Do not remove object from the lists at the unref_dag() stage.
Introduce a new unlink_object() function and call it in
unload_object() instead. Removing the object in unref_dag() is
too early, rtld calls _fini() function after that and shared
objects might fail resolve their own symbols.
2003-02-17 20:58:27 +00:00
Alexey Zelkin
d9943f166b Advertize rtld(1) as ld.so(1) in manual pages world 2003-02-13 23:07:28 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
2542b742f1 Fix a typo in rtld_dirname. 2003-02-13 22:47:41 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
42d206e975 Implement dlinfo() function.
Introdice RTLD_SELF special handle and properly process it within
dlsym() and dlinfo() functions.

The intention is to improve our compatibility with Solaris and
to make a Java port easier.

Partially submitted by:	phantom
2003-02-13 17:47:44 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
92b0ec0832 Add missing include files I forgot about in previous commit. 2003-02-13 17:35:00 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
d38a104b75 Remove /usr/lib/elf from a default search path.
Move xprintf to malloc.c, it is only used there. Make static.

Submitted by:	phantom
2003-02-13 17:05:10 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
f8d7256a27 When unloading dependencies make sure they are removed from all the
associated lists:
   remove RTLD_GLOBAL objects from global objects list;
   remove the parent object from dldags list of its children.

Previosly we were doing that only to the top-level object OF the DAG
being unloaded and all its dependencies were ignored, leading to
mysterious crashes later.

Submitted by:	peter (partially)
2003-02-10 23:15:07 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
fa7dd9c5bc Change the way ELF coredumps are handled. Instead of unconditionally
skipping read-only pages, which can result in valuable non-text-related
data not getting dumped, the ELF loader and the dynamic loader now mark
read-only text pages NOCORE and the coredump code only checks (primarily) for
complete inaccessibility of the page or NOCORE being set.

Certain applications which map large amounts of read-only data will
produce much larger cores.  A new sysctl has been added,
debug.elf_legacy_coredump, which will revert to the old behavior.

This commit represents collaborative work by all parties involved.
The PR contains a program demonstrating the problem.

PR:		kern/45994
Submitted by:	"Peter Edwards" <pmedwards@eircom.net>, Archie Cobbs <archie@dellroad.org>
Reviewed by:	jdp, dillon
MFC after:	7 days
2002-12-16 19:24:43 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
8d5d039f80 Uniformly refer to a file system as "file system".
Approved by:	re
2002-12-12 17:26:04 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
f94cc7e9ca Fix rtld to handle SPARC_R_UA{16,64} relocations correctly.
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
2002-12-05 16:58:31 +00:00
Peter Grehan
b9dea67fa8 rtld support for PowerPC. Mostly obtained from NetBSD, with mods
for binutils 2.13

Reviewed by:  benno

Approved by:  re (blanket)
2002-12-04 07:32:20 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
999d9d2bd4 Put back a test for binaries with no PT_LOAD entries I over-jealosly
removed in r1.69.

Apploved by:	re (rwatson)
2002-11-29 16:41:31 +00:00
Thomas Moestl
a42a42e9b9 Fix the handling of high PLT entries (> 32764) on sparc64. This requires
additional arguments to reloc_jmpslot(), which is why MI code and MD code
of other platforms had to be changed.

Reviewed by:	jake
Approved by:	re
2002-11-18 22:08:50 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
8b7f25d41d Add support for binaries with arbitrary number of PT_LOAD sections.
Reviewed by:	peter
2002-10-23 01:43:29 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
b2ce513208 Change the symbol lookup order to search RTLD_GLOBAL objects
before referencing object's DAG. This makes it possible for
C++ exceptions to work across shared libraries and brings
us closer to the search order used by Solaris/Linux.

Reviewed by:	jdp
Approved by:	obrien
MFC after:	1 month
2002-10-19 23:03:35 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
d1cf9ea2c4 Fix a problem with RTLD_TRACE flag to dlopen(3), which sometimes can return
even if there was no error occured (when trying to dlopen(3) object that
already linked into executable which does dlopen(3) call). This is more
proper fix for `ldd /usr/lib/libc.so' problem, because the new behaviour
conforms to documentation.

Remove workaround from ldd.c (rev.1.32).

PR:		35099
Submitted by:	Nathan Hawkins <utsl@quic.net>
MFC after:	1 week
2002-10-19 10:18:29 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
b2bced0aef Use the new freebsd output format from Binutils 2.13.1. 2002-10-12 02:30:53 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
2908cc64eb <machine/atomic.h> requires <sys/types.h>.
Reviewed by:	jake, mike
2002-10-09 20:20:43 +00:00
Thomas Moestl
a4823075e5 Return an error if a symbol is not found in reloc_jmpslots() instead of
crashing.
2002-09-14 12:14:24 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
708bc7c7b4 Fix a nasty memory corruption bug caused by having a bogus pointer
for the DT_IA64_PLT_RESERVE dynamic table entry. When a shared object
does not have any PLT relocations, the linker apparently doesn't find
it necessary to actually reserve the space for the BOR (Bind On
Reference) entries as pointed to by the DTE. As a result, relocatable
data in the PLT was overwritten, causing some unexpected control flow
with annoyingly predictable outcome: coredump.
To reproduce:
	% echo 'int main() { return 0; }' > foo.c
	% cc -o foo foo.c -lxpg4
2002-08-22 03:56:57 +00:00
Warner Losh
7b5564b2ee Include stddef.h for NULL definition, rather than rolling our own here.
Reviewed by: jdp
2002-08-21 19:03:26 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ecfdc2e0cd Add support for the R_IA64_IPLTLSB relocation in non-PLT context.
This relocation creates a function descriptor at the specified
address and is commonly used for C++ to create virtual function
tables.
2002-08-20 00:24:33 +00:00
John Polstra
0df23e4bd5 Don't acquire the writer lock in rtld_exit when clearing the shared
objects' reference counts.  This function is called by the atexit
mechanism at program shutdown.  I don't think the locking is necessary
here.  It caused OpenOffice builds to hang more often than not.
Credit to Martin Blapp and Matt Dillon for helping to diagnose this
problem and for testing the fix.
2002-08-08 15:53:23 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
b1d6ef2ee9 Add END markers to asm functions so that debuggers can find their size. 2002-07-17 22:20:41 +00:00
John Polstra
e6f0183bff Remove the nanosleep calls from the spin loops in the locking code.
They provided little benefit (if any) and they caused some problems
in OpenOffice, at least in post-KSE -current and perhaps in other
environments too.  The nanosleep calls prevented the profiling timer
from advancing during the spinloops, thereby preventing the thread
scheduler from ever pre-empting the spinning thread.  Alexander
Kabaev diagnosed this problem, Martin Blapp helped with testing,
and Matt Dillon provided some helpful suggestions.

This is a short-term fix for a larger problem.  The use of spinlocking
isn't guaranteed to work in all cases.  For example, if the spinning
thread has higher priority than all other threads, it may never be
pre-empted, and the thread holding the lock may never progress far
enough to release the lock.  On the other hand, spinlocking is the
only locking that can work with an arbitrary unknown threads package.

I have some ideas for a much better fix in the longer term.  It
would eliminate all locking inside the dynamic linker by making it
safe for symbol lookups and lazy binding to proceed in parallel
with a call to dlopen or dlclose.  This means that the only mutual
exclusion needed would be to prevent multiple simultaneous calls
to dlopen and/or dlclose.  That mutual exclusion could be put into
the native pthreads library.  Applications using foreign threads
packages would have to make their own arrangements to ensure that
they did not have multiple threads in dlopen and/or dlclose -- a
reasonable requirement in my opinion.

MFC after:	3 days
2002-07-06 20:25:56 +00:00
Philippe Charnier
3f162cb85d The .Nm utility 2002-07-06 19:19:48 +00:00
John Polstra
d1c02bccdc Update the asm statements to use the "+" modifier instead of
matching constraints where appropriate.  This makes the dynamic
linker buildable at -O0 again.

Thanks to Bruce Evans for identifying the cause of the build
problem.

MFC after:	1 week
2002-06-24 23:19:18 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
cf85da5c68 Add needed include of mman.h to fix sparc64 buildworld. 2002-06-24 05:23:46 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
b6801e6b54 The last bits of the alloca -> mmap fix. IA64 and SPARC64 (current only).
Untested (testing request went unanswered), but sparc64 is not expected to
cause problems.  IA64 is not expected to cause problems but the patch was
slightly more complex so the possibility exists.

Approved by:    jdp
2002-06-22 18:36:21 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
eebf98659e This is the same alloca() fix as was committed for i386. David O'Brien
tested the patch on -stable.

Reviewed by:	obrien
Approved by:	jdp
MFC after:	3 days
2002-06-18 05:42:33 +00:00
John Polstra
5f8aa32e1b Dillon's recent commits to the dynamic linker without running them
by me first have given me a good excuse to drop my MAINTAINERship.

MFC after:	1 week
2002-06-10 21:51:16 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
b08440e568 Correct a bug in the last commit. The whole point of creating a 'done:'
goto target was so the cache could be freed.  So free the cache after
done: rather then before done: (!)

Submitted by:	Gavin Atkinson <gavin@ury.york.ac.uk>
2002-06-10 21:15:50 +00:00
Matthew Dillon
b603db3019 In tracking down an installation seg fault with then openoffice port
Martin Blapp determined that the elf dynamic loader was at fault.  In
particular, the loader uses alloca() to allocate a symbol cache on the
stack.  Normally this would work just fine, but if the loader is called
from a threaded program and the object being loaded is fairly large the
alloca() can blow away the thread stack and effect other nearby thread
stacks as well.  My testing showed that the symbol cache can be as large
as 250KBytes during the openoffice port build and install sequence.  Martin
was able to work around the problem by disabling the symbol cache
(cache = NULL;).  However, this solution is not adequate for commit because
it can cause an enormous cpu burden for applications which do a lot of
dynamic loading (e.g. like konqueror).

The solution is to use anonymous mmap() to temporarily allocate space to
hold the symbol cache.  In testing I found that replacing the alloca()
with mmap() has no observable degredation in performance.

It should be noted that this bug does not necessarily cause an immediate
crash but can instead result in long term corruption and instability in
applications that load modules from threads.  The bug is almost certainly
responsible for some of the instabilities found in konqueror, for example,
and possibly netscape too.

Sleuthing work by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
X-MFC after:	Before or after the 4.6 release depending on the release engineers
2002-06-10 18:52:31 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
5c8e25383a Include machine/ia64_cpu.h because we use ia64_mf().
Submitted by: ru
2002-05-21 00:04:08 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
2aba02382e Fix handling of weak references to undefined symbols on ia64:
o  Set st_shndx for sym_zero to SHN_UNDEF instead of SHN_ABS.
   This gives us something to reliably test against.
o  For weak references to undefined sysmbols (as indicated by
   having st_shndx equals SHN_UNDEF) in the context of OPDs,
   the address of the OPD is to be zero, not the address of
   the function it contains.
o  For weak references to undefined symbols in all other cases
   (only DIR64LSB at this time), the actual relocated value is
   to be zero, not the value prior to relocating.

Roughly speaking, weak references to undefined symbols are no-ops.

Tested on: i386, ia64
2002-04-27 05:32:51 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
c7e3bd1ce6 Now that local symbols aren't looked up with the symbol hash table,
binding works for local symbols. Remove the workaround...
2002-04-27 02:53:31 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
9d4f27148f Don't do symbol lookups for local symbols. The symbol index in the
relocation identifies the symbol to which we need to bind. This
solves a problem seen on ia64 where the symbol hash table does not
contain local symbols and thus resulted in unresolved symbols.

Tested on: alpha, i386, ia64
2002-04-27 02:48:29 +00:00
Peter Wemm
968253905e Fix a relocation bug in the ia64 ld.so. Weak function pointers in shared
objects were not being correctly set to zero.  Instead, the function
descriptor pointer was set to the load address of the .so object.  This
caused gcc generated binaries to segfault on exit when crtbegin.asm's
_fini code tested the __cxa_finalize() function pointer for zero.

This is a bit of a hack because of a problem nearby workaround for
find_symdef and its quirks (failures) for local symbols.  This still
needs to be fixed.
2002-04-07 04:16:35 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
2da08e795e Minor changes to make this work on sparc64.
Approved by:	jdp
Tested on:	alpha, i386, sparc64
2002-04-02 02:19:02 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
e4c9dc6770 rtld support for sparc64.
Largely obtained from:	netbsd
Submitted by:	jake, tmm
2002-03-13 02:40:39 +00:00
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
e211585c77 When searching an object that was opened with RTLD_GLOBAL, search its DAG too.
PR:		bin/25059
Approved by:	jdp
MFC after:	3 weeks
2002-02-27 23:44:50 +00:00
Peter Wemm
939bc65715 ld-elf.so.1 assumed a few too many things about the ordering of sections
produced by ld(8) (ie: that _DYNAMIC immediately follows the _GOT).
The new binutils import changed that, and the intial GOT relocation
broke.  Use a custom linker script to provide a real end-of-GOT symbol.

Update ld.so to deal with the new (faster) PLT format that gcc-3.1 and
binutils can produce.

This is probably incomplete, but appears to be working again.

Obtained from:  NetBSD
(And a fix to a silly mistake that I made by:  gallatin)
2002-02-18 02:24:10 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
2024994319 Add support such that if LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS_ALL is defined to a
non-empty string in the environment; we indicate which objects caused
each object to be loaded.

PR:		30908
Submitted-by:	Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org>
2002-02-17 07:04:32 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
c6de4ce791 Allow ldd(1) be used on shared libraries in addition to executables. 2002-02-04 10:33:48 +00:00
Kris Kennaway
8f23d50652 Mark a function as __printflike()
MFC after:	1 week
2002-02-04 01:41:35 +00:00
John Polstra
a7dcaa3441 Change the library search order so that LD_LIBRARY_PATH overrides
all others.

PR:		bin/28191
MFC after:	2 weeks
2002-01-25 16:35:43 +00:00
David Malone
98d1592458 Change brk's prototype from char *brk(const char *) to int brk(const void *)
and sbrk's prototype from char *sbrk(int) to void *sbrk(intptr_t).

This makes us more consistant with NetBSD and standards which include
these functions. Bruce pointed out that ptrdiff_t would probably
have been better than intptr_t, but this doesn't match other
implimentations.

Also remove local declarations of sbrk and unnecessary casting.

PR:		32296
Tested by:	Harti Brandt <brandt@fokus.gmd.de>
MFC after:	1 month
2002-01-24 12:11:31 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
bcf2b1b312 mdoc(7) police: tidy up. 2002-01-10 17:49:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm
14a55adf36 Update rtld for the "new" ia64 ABI. In the old toolchain, the
DT_INIT and DT_FINI tags pointed to fptr records.  In 2.11.2, it points
to the actuall address of the function.  On IA64 you cannot just take
an address of a function, store it in a function pointer variable and
call it.. the function pointers point to a fptr data block that has the
target gp and address in it.  This is absolutely necessary for using
the in-tree binutils toolchain, but (unfortunately) will not work with
old shared libraries.  Save your old ld-elf.so.1 if you want to use
old ones still.  Do not mix-and-match.

This is a no-op change for i386 and alpha.

Reviewed by:	dfr
2001-10-29 10:10:10 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d4cf88ddc4 Fix a dependency violation (branch after alloc) 2001-10-29 10:05:32 +00:00
Doug Rabson
b5393d9f78 Add ia64 support. Various adjustments were made to existing targets to
cope with a few interface changes required by the ia64. In particular,
function pointers on ia64 need special treatment in rtld.
2001-10-15 18:48:42 +00:00
Doug Rabson
97571220e2 The support for accelerating find_symdef() with a cache was broken. This
fixes the problem and improves startup times for large applications such
as KDE2 considerably.

Reviewed by:	jdp
MFC after:	1 week
2001-10-10 07:15:01 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
c4d9468ea0 mdoc(7) police:
Avoid using parenthesis enclosure macros (.Pq and .Po/.Pc) with plain text.
Not only this slows down the mdoc(7) processing significantly, but it also
has an undesired (in this case) effect of disabling hyphenation within the
entire enclosed block.
2001-08-07 15:48:51 +00:00
Sheldon Hearn
e1b4d8d074 Use STD{ERR,IN,OUT}_FILENO instead of their numeric values. The
definitions are more readable, and it's possible that they're
more portable to pathalogical platforms.

Submitted by:   David Hill <david@phobia.ms>
2001-07-26 11:02:39 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
0efe23d669 mdoc(7) police: removed HISTORY info from the .Os call. 2001-07-10 10:49:54 +00:00
Dima Dorfman
70d51341bf mdoc(7) police: remove extraneous .Pp before and/or after .Sh. 2001-07-09 09:54:33 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
5521ff5a4d mdoc(7) police: sort SEE ALSO xrefs (sort -b -f +2 -3 +1 -2). 2001-07-06 16:46:48 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
4cf39050cc Use new backup feature of install(1). 2001-05-28 16:58:35 +00:00
John Polstra
c15e7faad5 Performance improvements for the ELF dynamic linker. These
particularly help programs which load many shared libraries with
a lot of relocations.  Large C++ programs such as are found in KDE
are a prime example.

While relocating a shared object, maintain a vector of symbols
which have already been looked up, directly indexed by symbol
number.  Typically, symbols which are referenced by a relocation
entry are referenced by many of them.  This is the same optimization
I made to the a.out dynamic linker in 1995 (rtld.c revision 1.30).

Also, compare the first character of a sought-after symbol with its
symbol table entry before calling strcmp().

On a PII/400 these changes reduce the start-up time of a typical
KDE program from 833 msec (elapsed) to 370 msec.

MFC after:	5 days
2001-05-05 23:21:05 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
5e6220d9d0 * include/elf.h has been repo copied to include/elf-hints.h, and it no
longer includes machine/elf.h.
* consumers of elf.h now use the minimalist elf header possible.

This change is motivated by Binutils 2.11.0 and too much clashing over
our base elf headers and the Binutils elf headers.
2001-05-02 23:56:21 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
e5b5c66bca - Backout botched attempt to intoduce MANSECT feature.
- MAN[1-9] -> MAN.
2001-03-26 14:22:12 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
896eb7d10c Prepare for mdoc(7)NG. 2001-01-16 09:15:57 +00:00
John Polstra
27e2c03506 Fix a bug in which a program called dlclose from a destructor and
got an assert failure in the dynamic linker.
2001-01-05 04:36:17 +00:00
Ruslan Ermilov
58eaff2332 Prepare for mdoc(7)NG. 2000-12-20 13:26:01 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
1a37aa566b Add `_PATH_DEVZERO'.
Use _PATH_* where where possible.
2000-12-09 09:35:55 +00:00
John Polstra
c1ff193db4 Remove the superfluous call to _rtld_error() in symlook_default().
The function's callers generate the error message when appropriate.

This eliminates the message ``Undefined symbol "__register_frame_info"''
which was bogusly returned by dlerror() in some cases.
2000-11-07 22:41:53 +00:00
John Polstra
185db83c04 Add support for dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, ...). 2000-09-19 04:27:16 +00:00
John W. De Boskey
bde08d0072 Pass two pointer parameters to the r_debug_state() hook
function, thus allowing a debugger or other trace tool
to easily grab the addresses of the needed structures
off the stack.

This change is transparent to gdb, which locates the
link_map list and transfers it to debugger memory
for comparison purposes.

A sample program will be committed showing how this can
be used.

Reviewed by:    John Polstra <jdp@FreeBSD.org>
2000-08-26 05:13:29 +00:00
John Polstra
44a028c369 Revamp the code that calls shared libraries' init and fini functions.
Formerly the init functions were called in the opposite of the
order in which libraries were loaded, and libraries were loaded
according to a breadth-first traversal of the dependency graph.
That ordering came from SVR4.0, and it was easy to implement but
not always sensible.

Now we do a depth-first walk over the dependency graph and call
the init functions in an order such that each shared object's needed
objects are initialized before the shared object itself.  At the
same time we build a list of finalization (fini) functions in the
opposite order, to guarantee correct C++ destructor ordering whenever
possible.  (It may not be possible if dlopen and dlclose are used
in strange ways, but we come as close as one can come.)

The need for this renovation has become apparent as more programs
have started using multithreading.  The multithreaded C library
libc_r requires initialization, whereas the standard libc does not.
Since virtually every other object depends on the C library, it is
important that it get initialized first.
2000-07-26 04:24:40 +00:00
Brian Feldman
119fc1a3ce We shouldn't use cp to save the old ld-elf.so.1. Use the sanctioned tool
${INSTALL} with -C -p instead.
2000-07-20 08:00:02 +00:00
John Polstra
cf98e66403 Fix a bug which could cause programs with user threads packages to
lock against themselves, causing infinite spinning.  Brian Feldman
found this problem when testing with Mozilla and supplied the fix,
which I have revised slightly.

Here is the failure scenario.  A thread calls dlopen() and acquires
the writer lock.  While the thread still holds the lock, a signal
is delivered and caught.  The signal handler tries to call a function
which hasn't been bound yet.  It thus enters the dynamic linker
and tries to acquire the reader lock.  Since the writer lock is
already held, it will spin forever in the signal handler.  The
thread holding the lock won't be able to progress and release the
lock.

The solution is to block almost all signals while holding the
exclusive lock.

A similar problem could conceivably occur in the opposite order.
Namely, a thread is holding the reader lock and then a signal
handler calls dlopen() or dlclose() and spins waiting for the writer
lock.  We deal with this administratively by proclaiming that signal
handlers aren't allowed to call dlopen() or dlclose().  Actually
we don't have to proclaim a thing, since signal handlers aren't
allowed to call any system functions except those which are explicitly
permitted.

Submitted by:	Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green>
2000-07-17 17:18:13 +00:00
John Polstra
630df077ab 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
John Polstra
517191eede When installing the dynamic linker, save the previous version in
"ld-elf.so.1.old".  The dynamic linker is a critical component of
the system, and it is difficult to recover if it is damaged and
there isn't a working backup available.  For instance, parts of
the toolchain such as the assembler are dynamically linked, making
it impossible to build a new dynamic linker if the installed one
doesn't work.
2000-07-08 03:27:54 +00:00
Sheldon Hearn
cbe10916b3 Only punctuation is an allowed argument type for open-close macros
such as Po/Pc, as explained by phantom.

Reported by:	billf
2000-06-30 06:30:53 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
e39756439c Back out the previous change to the queue(3) interface.
It was not discussed and should probably not happen.

Requested by:		msmith and others
2000-05-26 02:09:24 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
740a1973a6 Change the way that the queue(3) structures are declared; don't assume that
the type argument to *_HEAD and *_ENTRY is a struct.

Suggested by:	phk
Reviewed by:	phk
Approved by:	mdodd
2000-05-23 20:41:01 +00:00
John Polstra
a0f2601e13 Eliminate unaligned accesses that occurred when relocating the
DWARF2 exception tables emitted by the compiler for C++ sources.
These tables are tightly packed, and they contain some relocated
addresses which are not well-aligned.
2000-05-22 16:31:18 +00:00
Sheldon Hearn
35add0e9a7 Cross-reference ldd(1) in rtld(1) and vice versa. 2000-03-28 09:01:04 +00:00
Bruce Evans
9d08570309 Fixed missing DPADDs.
Fixed some style bugs (some usual ones for LDADD, and misformatting of
$FreeBSD$).
2000-03-27 16:11:27 +00:00
John Polstra
ea5cc7f114 Add a manual page for the ELF dynamic linker. I initially created
rtld.1 by means of a repository copy from "src/libexec/rtld-aout/rtld.1".
Then I edited it to make it (more) accurate for the ELF dynamic
linker.
2000-01-29 03:16:54 +00:00
John Polstra
7dbe16fbee When a threads package registers locking methods with dllockinit(),
figure out which shared object(s) contain the the locking methods
and fully bind those objects as if they had been loaded with
LD_BIND_NOW=1.  The goal is to keep the locking methods from
requiring any lazy binding.  Otherwise infinite recursion occurs
in _rtld_bind.

This fixes the infinite recursion problem in the linuxthreads port.
2000-01-29 01:27:04 +00:00
John Polstra
5bc2f0f789 Block almost all signals in the default locking method instead of
just a few of them.  This looks like it solves the recent

  ld-elf.so.1: assert failed: /usr/src/libexec/rtld-elf/lockdflt.c:55

failures seen by some applications such as JDK.
2000-01-25 01:32:56 +00:00
John Polstra
924d965ba0 Allow files in LD_PRELOAD to be separated by white space, like Solaris
and Linux.
2000-01-22 22:20:05 +00:00
John Polstra
9bfb1dfc29 Revamp the mechanism for enumerating and calling shared objects'
init and fini functions.  Now the code is very careful to hold no
locks when calling these functions.  Thus the dynamic linker cannot
be re-entered with a lock already held.

Remove the tolerance for recursive locking that I added in revision
1.2 of dllockinit.c.  Recursive locking shouldn't happen any more.

Mozilla and JDK users: I'd appreciate confirmation that things still
work right (or at least the same) with these changes.
2000-01-09 21:13:48 +00:00
John Polstra
3600eb76c6 Work around an assert failure in the dynamic linker's default thread
locking functions.  If an application loads a shared object with
dlopen() and the shared object has an init function which requires
lazy binding, then _rtld_bind is called when the thread is already
inside the dynamic linker.  This leads to a recursive acquisition
of the lock, which I was not expecting -- hence the assert failure.

This work-around makes the default locking functions handle recursive
locking.  It is NOT the correct fix -- that should be implemented
at the generic locking level rather than in the default locking
functions.  I will implement the correct fix in a future commit.

Since the dllockinit() interface will likely need to change, warn
about that in both the man page and the header file.
1999-12-28 04:38:17 +00:00
John Polstra
d3980376e8 Add a new function dllockinit() for registering thread locking
functions to be used by the dynamic linker.  This can be called by
threads packages at start-up time.  I will add the call to libc_r
soon.

Also add a default locking method that is used up until dllockinit()
is called.  The default method works by blocking SIGVTALRM, SIGPROF,
and SIGALRM in critical sections.  It is based on the observation
that most user-space threads packages implement thread preemption
with one of these signals (usually SIGVTALRM).

The dynamic linker has never been reentrant, but it became less
reentrant in revision 1.34 of "src/libexec/rtld-elf/rtld.c".
Starting with that revision, multiple threads each doing lazy
binding could interfere with each other.  The usual symptom was
that a symbol was falsely reported as undefined at start-up time.
It was rare but not unseen.  This commit fixes it.
1999-12-27 04:44:04 +00:00
John Polstra
df618d033c In revision 1.21 I changed the search order for shared libraries,
but I forgot to make the corresponding fix to the comment.  Rectify
that.

Submitted by:	Tony Finch <fanf@demon.net>
1999-11-19 04:45:07 +00:00
Alexey Zelkin
8bd2d9a0e6 .Nm += "rtld"
apropos(1) now knows about rtld(1) manpage.
1999-09-28 05:35:59 +00:00
John Polstra
825316056a Make jdk-1.1.8 work again. It turns out that some code inside
libjava peeks into the dynamic linker's private Obj_Entry structures.
My recent changes introduced some new members near the front of
the structures, causing libjava to get the wrong fields.  This commit
moves the new members toward the end of the structure so that the
layout of the portion that is relevant to JDK remains the same as
before.

I will work with the JDK porting team to see if we can come up with
a less fragile way for them to do what they need to do.  I understand
the current approach was necessary in order to work around some
limitations of the dynamic linker.  Maybe it's not necessary any
more.
1999-09-05 21:12:53 +00:00
John Polstra
0edd3ca778 Enable -Wformat checking for debug_printf(). 1999-09-04 20:36:27 +00:00
John Polstra
ed5e1b5537 Change the warning about unrecognized entries in the dynamic table
to a debug message which is disabled in production builds of the
dynamic linker.  The condition warned about is normally harmless.

PR:		bin/12849
1999-09-04 20:14:48 +00:00
John Polstra
476015a33b When looking up symbols, search the objects loaded at program start
up first -- before the dlopened DAGs containing the referencing
object.

This makes dynamically loaded perl modules work properly again.
1999-09-04 04:00:09 +00:00
John Polstra
a607e5d7f8 Get the actual pathname of the dynamic linker from the executable's
PT_INTERP program header entry, to ensure that gdb always finds
the right dynamic linker.

Use obj->relocbase to simplify a few calculations where appropriate.
1999-08-30 01:54:13 +00:00
John Polstra
7360ae0f2a When checking to see if a shared object is already loaded, look for
a device/inode match if no pathname match is found.
1999-08-30 01:50:41 +00:00
John Polstra
926ea445fe Revamp the symbol lookup algorithm to cope better with objects
loaded separately by dlopen that have global symbols with identical
names.  Viewing each dlopened object as a DAG which is linked by its
DT_NEEDED entries in the dynamic table, the search order is as
follows:

  * If the referencing object was linked with -Bsymbolic, search it
    internally.
  * Search all dlopened DAGs containing the referencing object.
  * Search all objects loaded at program start up.
  * Search all objects which were dlopened() using the RTLD_GLOBAL
    flag (which is now supported too).

The search terminates as soon as a strong definition is found.
Lacking that, the first weak definition is used.

These rules match those of Solaris, as best I could determine them
from its vague manual pages and the results of experiments I performed.

PR:		misc/12438
1999-08-30 01:48:19 +00:00
John Polstra
7326e0b620 When honoring -Bsymbolic, still keep searching if only a weak
definition was found in the referencing object.
1999-08-30 01:25:38 +00:00
John Polstra
6bd9374580 Simplify the logic in find_symdef(). 1999-08-30 01:24:08 +00:00
Peter Wemm
7f3dea244c $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 00:22:10 +00:00
John Polstra
41f83b07a8 Add a NULL pointer check whose absence could cause segmentation
violations in certain obscure cases involving failed dlopens.  Many
thanks to Archie Cobbs for providing me with a good test case.

Eliminate a block that existed only to localize a declaration.
1999-08-20 22:33:44 +00:00