Stop using strerror(3) in rtld, which brings in msgcat and stdio.
Directly access sys_errlist array of errno messages with private
rtld_strerror() function.
Now,
$ size /libexec/ld-elf.so.1
text data bss dec hex filename
96983 2480 8744 108207 1a6af /libexec/ld-elf.so.1
Reviewed by: dim, kan
MFC after: 2 weeks
Provide rtld-private implementations of __stack_chk_guard,
__stack_chk_fail() and __chk_fail() symbols, to be used by functions
linked from libc_pic.a. This avoids use of libc stack_protector.c,
which pulls in syslog(3) and stdio as dependency.
Also, do initialize rtld-private copy __stack_chk_guard, previously
libc-provided one was not initialized, since we do not call rtld
object _init() methods.
Reviewed by: kan
MFC after: 3 weeks
yet, and object segments are not yet mapped. Only parse the notes that
appear in the first page of the dso (as it should be anyway), and use
the preloaded page content.
Reported and tested by: stass
MFC after: 20 days
particular on ARM, do require working init arrays.
Traditional FreeBSD crt1 calls _init and _fini of the binary, instead
of allowing runtime linker to arrange the calls. This was probably
done to have the same crt code serve both statically and dynamically
linked binaries. Since ABI mandates that first is called preinit
array functions, then init, and then init array functions, the init
have to be called from rtld now.
To provide binary compatibility to old FreeBSD crt1, which calls _init
itself, rtld only calls intializers and finalizers for main binary if
binary has a note indicating that new crt was used for linking. Add
parsing of ELF notes to rtld, and cache p_osrel value since we parsed
it anyway.
The patch is inspired by init_array support for DragonflyBSD, written
by John Marino.
Reviewed by: kan
Tested by: andrew (arm, previous version), flo (sparc64, previous version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
for TLS microbenchmark using global-dynamic TLS model on amd64 (which is
default for PIC dso objects).
Split the slow path into tls_get_addr_slow(), for which inlining is
disabled. This prevents the registers spill on tls_get_addr_common()
entry.
Provide static branch hint to the compiler, indicating that slow path
is not likely to be taken.
While there, do some minimal style adjustments.
Reported and tested by: davidxu
MFC after: 1 week
Since after r232498 the ctype macros require working access to
thread-local variables, rtld crashes when libmap.conf is present.
Use hand-made isspace1() macro which is enough to detect spaces in
libmap.conf.
Reported by: alc, lme, many on current@
Tested by: lme
Reviewed by: dim, kan
MFC after: 1 week
relocations until tls is initialized and stacks permissions correctly
set. This allows the ifunc to call malloc(3) and some other heavy
services.
Add debug banner.
MFC after: 3 days
from the dispatcher would also acquire bind lock in read mode, which
is the supported operation. plt is explicitely designed to allow safe
multithreaded updates, so the shared lock do not cause problems.
The error in r228435 is that it allows read lock acquisition after the
write lock for the bind block. If we dlopened the shared object that
contains IRELATIVE or jump slot which target is STT_GNU_IFUNC, then
possible recursive plt resolve from the dispatcher would cause it.
Postpone the resolution for irelative/ifunc right before initializers
are called, and drop bind lock around calls to dispatcher. Use
initlist to iterate over the objects instead of the ->next, due to
drop of the bind lock in iteration.
For i386/reloc.c:reloc_iresolve(), fix calculation of the dispatch
function address for dso, by taking into account possible non-zero
relocbase.
MFC after: 3 weeks
rtld on 386 and amd64. This adds runtime bits neccessary for the use
of the dispatch functions from the dynamically-linked executables and
shared libraries.
To allow use of external references from the dispatch function, resolution
of the R_MACHINE_IRESOLVE relocations in PLT is postponed until GOT entries
for PLT are prepared, and normal resolution of the GOT entries is finished.
Similar to how it is done by GNU, IRELATIVE relocations are resolved in
advance, instead of normal lazy handling for PLT.
Move the init_pltgot() call before the relocations for the object are
processed.
MFC after: 3 weeks
relocations are processed, since tls initialization section might be
itself subject for relocations. Only set up of the block is postponed,
the tls block offsets are allocated before relocation processing, since
TLS-related relocations may need offsets ready.
Reported by: ale
PR: threads/161344
Reviewed by: kan
MFC after: 1 week
executable) after r190885. The whole region for the dso is mmaped with
MAP_NOCORE flag, doing only mprotect(2) over .bss prevented it from
writing .bss to core files.
Revert the optimization of using mprotect(2) to establish .bss, overlap
the section with mmap(2).
Reported by: attilio
Reviewed by: attilio, emaste
Approved by: re (bz)
MFC after: 2 weeks
functions. The _rtld_error() function might be called early during the rtld
bootstrap, in which case function pointers are not yet functional on ia64
due to required relocations not yet performed.
Reported, reviewed and tested by: marcel
Approved by: re (bz)
function (a hook necessary for gdb support), is inlined, but since the
function contains no code, no calls to it are generated. When gdb is
debugging a dynamically linked program, this causes backtraces to be
corrupted.
Fix it by marking the function __noinline, and inserting an empty asm
statement, that pretends to clobber memory. This forces the compiler to
emit calls to r_debug_state() throughout rtld.c.
Approved by: re (kib)
C runtime services, like printf(). Unfortunately, the multithread-safeness
measures in the libc do not work in rtld environment.
Rip the kernel printf() implementation and use it in the rtld instead of
libc version. This printf does not require any shared global data and thus
is mt-safe. Systematically use rtld_printf() and related functions, remove
the calls to err(3).
Note that stdio is still pulled from libc due to libmap implementaion using
fopen(). This is safe but unoptimal, and can be changed later.
Reported and tested by: pgj
Diagnosed and reviewed by: kan (previous version)
Approved by: re (bz)
The second close(2) call resulted in heisenbugs in some multi-threaded
applications where e.g. dlopen(3) call in one thread could close a file
descriptor for a file having been opened in other thread concurrently.
My litmus test for this issue was an openoffice.org build.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Emitt an error when encountering an unsupported and in case of the
kernel also for unaligned relocations.
- Fix R_SPARC_LOX10 relocations. Apparently these are hardly ever used.
- Add the _RF_X committed in r212998 also to the tables in the sparc64
reloc.c in order reduce differences between the kernel and the userland
source. This results in no functional change though.
- Fix further inconsistencies in the abbreviations of the names of the
relocations.
- Further whitespace fixes.
Obtained from: NetBSD [1]
values for resolved symbols relative to relocbase instead of sections
so detect this case and handle as appropriate, which allows using
kernel modules linked with affected versions of binutils. Actually I
think this is a bug in binutils but given that apparently nobody
complained for nearly six years and powerpc has basically the same
workaround I decided to put it in for the sparc64 kernel, too.
- Fix R_SPARC_HIX22 relocations. Apparently these are hardly ever used.