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DLINFO(3) |
FreeBSD Library Functions Manual |
DLINFO(3) |
dlinfo —
information about dynamically loaded object
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include <link.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
int
dlinfo (void
* restrict handle, int
request, void * restrict
p);
The dlinfo () function provides information about
dynamically loaded object. The action taken by
dlinfo () and exact meaning and type of
p argument depend on value of the
request argument provided by caller.
The handle argument is either the value
returned from the
dlopen(3)
function call or special handle RTLD_SELF . If
handle is the value returned from
dlopen(3),
the information returned by the dlinfo () function
pertains to the specified object. If handle is the special handle
RTLD_SELF , the information returned pertains to the
caller itself.
Possible values for the request argument
are:
RTLD_DI_LINKMAP
- Retrieve the Link_map (struct
link_map) structure pointer for the specified
handle. On successful return, the
p argument is filled with the pointer to the
Link_map structure (Link_map
**p) describing a shared object specified by the
handle argument. The Link_map
structures are maintained as a doubly linked list by
ld.so(1),
in the same order as
dlopen(3)
and
dlclose(3)
are called. See EXAMPLES, example 1.
The Link_map structure is defined in
<link.h> and has the
following members:
caddr_t l_base; /* Base Address of library */
const char *l_name; /* Absolute Path to Library */
const void *l_ld; /* Pointer to .dynamic in memory */
struct link_map *l_next, /* linked list of mapped libs */
*l_prev;
caddr_t l_addr; /* Load Offset of library */
const char *l_refname; /* Object this one filters for */
- l_base
- The base address of the object loaded into memory.
- l_name
- The full name of the loaded shared object.
- l_ld
- The address of the dynamic linking information segment
(
PT_DYNAMIC ) loaded into memory.
- l_next
- The next Link_map structure on the link-map
list.
- l_prev
- The previous Link_map structure on the link-map
list.
- l_addr
- The load offset of the object, that is, the difference between the
actual load address and the base virtual address the object was linked
at.
- l_refname
- A name of the object this object filters for, if any. If there are
more then one filtee, a name from the first
DT_FILTER dynamic entry is supplied.
RTLD_DI_SERINFO
- Retrieve the library search paths associated with the given
handle argument. The p
argument should point to Dl_serinfo structure buffer
(Dl_serinfo *p). The
Dl_serinfo structure must be initialized first with
the
RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE request.
The returned Dl_serinfo structure
contains dls_cnt Dl_serpath
entries. Each entry's dlp_name field points to the
search path. The corresponding dlp_info field
contains one of more flags indicating the origin of the path (see the
LA_SER_* flags defined in the
<link.h> header file).
See EXAMPLES, example 2, for a usage
example.
RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE
- Initialize a Dl_serinfo structure for use in a
RTLD_DI_SERINFO request. Both the
dls_cnt and dls_size fields
are returned to indicate the number of search paths applicable to the
handle, and the total size of a Dl_serinfo buffer
required to hold dls_cnt
Dl_serpath entries and the associated search path
strings. See EXAMPLES, example 2, for a
usage example.
- RTLD_DI_ORIGIN
- Retrieve the origin of the dynamic object associated with the handle. On
successful return, p argument is filled with the
char pointer (char *p).
The dlinfo () function returns 0 on success, or -1 if an
error occurred. Whenever an error has been detected, a message detailing it
can be retrieved via a call to
dlerror(3).
Example 1: Using dlinfo () to retrieve
Link_map structure.
The following example shows how dynamic library can detect the
list of shared libraries loaded after caller's one. For simplicity, error
checking has been omitted.
Link_map *map;
dlinfo(RTLD_SELF, RTLD_DI_LINKMAP, &map);
while (map != NULL) {
printf("%p: %s\n", map->l_addr, map->l_name);
map = map->l_next;
}
Example 2: Using dlinfo () to retrieve the
library search paths.
The following example shows how a dynamic object can inspect the
library search paths that would be used to locate a simple filename with
dlopen(3).
For simplicity, error checking has been omitted.
Dl_serinfo _info, *info = &_info;
Dl_serpath *path;
unsigned int cnt;
/* determine search path count and required buffer size */
dlinfo(RTLD_SELF, RTLD_DI_SERINFOSIZE, (void *)info);
/* allocate new buffer and initialize */
info = malloc(_info.dls_size);
info->dls_size = _info.dls_size;
info->dls_cnt = _info.dls_cnt;
/* obtain sarch path information */
dlinfo(RTLD_SELF, RTLD_DI_SERINFO, (void *)info);
path = &info->dls_serpath[0];
for (cnt = 1; cnt <= info->dls_cnt; cnt++, path++) {
(void) printf("%2d: %s\n", cnt, path->dls_name);
}
The dlinfo () function first appeared in the Solaris
operating system. In FreeBSD, it first appeared in
FreeBSD 4.8.
The FreeBSD implementation of the
dlinfo () function was originally written by
Alexey Zelkin
<phantom@FreeBSD.org>
and later extended and improved by Alexander Kabaev
<kan@FreeBSD.org>.
The manual page for this function was written by
Alexey Zelkin
<phantom@FreeBSD.org>.
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