Manpages - dladdr.3
Table of Contents
NAME
dladdr, dladdr1 - translate address to symbolic information
SYNOPSIS
#define _GNU_SOURCE #include <dlfcn.h> int dladdr(const void *addr, Dl_info *info); int dladdr1(const void *addr, Dl_info *info, void **extra_info, int flags); Link with -ldl.
DESCRIPTION
The function *dladdr*() determines whether the address specified in addr is located in one of the shared objects loaded by the calling application. If it is, then *dladdr*() returns information about the shared object and symbol that overlaps addr. This information is returned in a Dl_info structure:
typedef struct { const char *dli_fname; /* Pathname of shared object that contains address */ void *dli_fbase; /* Base address at which shared object is loaded */ const char *dli_sname; /* Name of symbol whose definition overlaps addr */ void *dli_saddr; /* Exact address of symbol named in dli_sname */ } Dl_info;
If no symbol matching addr could be found, then dli_sname and dli_saddr are set to NULL.
The function *dladdr1*() is like *dladdr*(), but returns additional information via the argument extra_info. The information returned depends on the value specified in flags, which can have one of the following values:
- RTLD_DL_LINKMAP
Obtain a pointer to the link map for the matched file. The extra_info argument points to a pointer to a link_map structure (i.e., struct link_map **), defined in <link.h> as:
struct link_map { ElfW(Addr) l_addr; /* Difference between the address in the ELF file and the address in memory */ char *l_name; /* Absolute pathname where object was found */ ElfW(Dyn) *l_ld; /* Dynamic section of the shared object */ struct link_map *l_next, *l_prev; /* Chain of loaded objects */ /* Plus additional fields private to the implementation */ };
- RTLD_DL_SYMENT
Obtain a pointer to the ELF symbol table entry of the matching symbol. The extra_info argument is a pointer to a symbol pointer: const ElfW(Sym) **. The ElfW/() macro definition turns its argument into the name of an ELF data type suitable for the hardware architecture. For example, on a 64-bit platform, /ElfW(Sym) yields the data type name Elf64_Sym, which is defined in <elf.h> as:
typedef struct { Elf64_Word st_name; /* Symbol name */ unsigned char st_info; /* Symbol type and binding */ unsigned char st_other; /* Symbol visibility */ Elf64_Section st_shndx; /* Section index */ Elf64_Addr st_value; /* Symbol value */ Elf64_Xword st_size; /* Symbol size */ } Elf64_Sym;
The st_name field is an index into the string table.
The st_info field encodes the symbol’s type and binding. The type can be extracted using the macro ELF64_ST_TYPE(st_info) (or ELF32_ST_TYPE() on 32-bit platforms), which yields one of the following values:
Value | Description |
STT_NOTYPE | Symbol type is unspecified |
STT_OBJECT | Symbol is a data object |
STT_FUNC | Symbol is a code object |
STT_SECTION | Symbol associated with a section |
STT_FILE | Symbol’s name is filename |
STT_COMMON | Symbol is a common data object |
STT_TLS | Symbol is thread-local data object |
STT_GNU_IFUNC | Symbol is indirect code object |
The symbol binding can be extracted from the st_info field using the macro ELF64_ST_BIND(st_info) (or ELF32_ST_BIND() on 32-bit platforms), which yields one of the following values:
Value | Description |
STB_LOCAL | Local symbol |
STB_GLOBAL | Global symbol |
STB_WEAK | Weak symbol |
STB_GNU_UNIQUE | Unique symbol |
The st_other field contains the symbol’s visibility, which can be extracted using the macro ELF64_ST_VISIBILITY(st_info) (or ELF32_ST_VISIBILITY() on 32-bit platforms), which yields one of the following values:
Value | Description |
STV_DEFAULT | Default symbol visibility rules |
STV_INTERNAL | Processor-specific hidden class |
STV_HIDDEN | Symbol unavailable in other modules |
STV_PROTECTED | Not preemptible, not exported |
RETURN VALUE
On success, these functions return a nonzero value. If the address specified in addr could be matched to a shared object, but not to a symbol in the shared object, then the info->dli_sname and info->dli_saddr fields are set to NULL.
If the address specified in addr could not be matched to a shared object, then these functions return 0. In this case, an error message is not available via *dlerror*(3).
VERSIONS
*dladdr*() is present in glibc 2.0 and later. *dladdr1*() first appeared in glibc 2.3.3.
ATTRIBUTES
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see *attributes*(7).
Interface | Attribute | Value |
*dladdr*(), *dladdr1*() | Thread safety | MT-Safe |
CONFORMING TO
These functions are nonstandard GNU extensions that are also present on Solaris.
BUGS
Sometimes, the function pointers you pass to *dladdr*() may surprise you. On some architectures (notably i386 and x86-64), dli_fname and dli_fbase may end up pointing back at the object from which you called *dladdr*(), even if the function used as an argument should come from a dynamically linked library.
The problem is that the function pointer will still be resolved at compile time, but merely point to the plt (Procedure Linkage Table) section of the original object (which dispatches the call after asking the dynamic linker to resolve the symbol). To work around this, you can try to compile the code to be position-independent: then, the compiler cannot prepare the pointer at compile time any more and *gcc*(1) will generate code that just loads the final symbol address from the got (Global Offset Table) at run time before passing it to *dladdr*().
SEE ALSO
*dl_iterate_phdr*(3), *dlinfo*(3), *dlopen*(3), *dlsym*(3), *ld.so*(8)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 5.13 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Information about dladdr.3 is found in manpage for: ld.so (8)