glibc/sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h
Roland McGrath a2e1b046f6 Sat Jan 6 16:39:14 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@churchy.gnu.ai.mit.edu>
* Makefile (subdirs): Added db.

	* resolv/Makefile (routines): Add res_data.
	* resolv/res_data.c, resolv/res_debug.c, resolv/resolv.h:
	Updated from BIND 4.9.3 final release.

	* elf/dynamic-link.h (elf_get_dynamic_info): Handle
	processor-specific tags.
	(ELF_DYNAMIC_DO_REL, ELF_DYNAMIC_DO_RELA): Handle absent DT_PLTREL tag.

	* elf/elf.h (DT_MIPS_NUM, DT_PROCNUM): New macros.
	* elf/link.h (struct link_map): Extend `l_info' by DT_PROCNUM.

	* sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h (elf_machine_runtime_setup): Take new
	arg LAZY.  Only do our work if LAZY and there is a DT_JMPREL record.
	* elf/dl-reloc.c (_dl_relocate_object): Call
	elf_machine_runtime_setup unconditionally, and pass it LAZY flag.

	* elf/dl-load.c: Fixed ELFMAG check to work for either byte order.
	Align end of load segment only to page size, not to segment alignment.
1996-01-07 10:00:21 +00:00

219 lines
6.9 KiB
C

/* Machine-dependent ELF dynamic relocation inline functions. i386 version.
Copyright (C) 1995, 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Library General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If
not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave,
Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_NAME "i386"
#include <assert.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <link.h>
/* Return nonzero iff E_MACHINE is compatible with the running host. */
static inline int
elf_machine_matches_host (Elf32_Half e_machine)
{
switch (e_machine)
{
case EM_386:
case EM_486:
return 1;
default:
return 0;
}
}
/* Return the run-time address of the _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.
Must be inlined in a function which uses global data. */
static inline Elf32_Addr *
elf_machine_got (void)
{
register Elf32_Addr *got asm ("%ebx");
return got;
}
/* Return the run-time load address of the shared object. */
static inline Elf32_Addr
elf_machine_load_address (void)
{
Elf32_Addr addr;
asm (" call here\n"
"here: popl %0\n"
" subl $here, %0"
: "=r" (addr));
return addr;
}
/* The `subl' insn above will contain an R_386_32 relocation entry
intended to insert the run-time address of the label `here'.
This will be the first relocation in the text of the dynamic linker;
we skip it to avoid trying to modify read-only text in this early stage. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_BEFORE_RTLD_RELOC(dynamic_info) \
++(const Elf32_Rel *) (dynamic_info)[DT_REL]->d_un.d_ptr; \
(dynamic_info)[DT_RELSZ]->d_un.d_val -= sizeof (Elf32_Rel);
/* Perform the relocation specified by RELOC and SYM (which is fully resolved).
MAP is the object containing the reloc. */
static inline void
elf_machine_rel (struct link_map *map,
const Elf32_Rel *reloc,
Elf32_Addr sym_loadaddr, const Elf32_Sym *sym)
{
Elf32_Addr *const reloc_addr = (void *) (map->l_addr + reloc->r_offset);
const Elf32_Addr sym_value = sym ? sym_loadaddr + sym->st_value : 0;
switch (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info))
{
case R_386_COPY:
memcpy (reloc_addr, (void *) sym_value, sym->st_size);
break;
case R_386_GLOB_DAT:
case R_386_JMP_SLOT:
*reloc_addr = sym_value;
break;
case R_386_32:
if (map->l_type == lt_interpreter)
{
/* Undo the relocation done here during bootstrapping. Now we will
relocate it anew, possibly using a binding found in the user
program or a loaded library rather than the dynamic linker's
built-in definitions used while loading those libraries. */
const Elf32_Sym *const dlsymtab
= (void *) (map->l_addr + map->l_info[DT_SYMTAB]->d_un.d_ptr);
*reloc_addr -= (map->l_addr +
dlsymtab[ELF32_R_SYM (reloc->r_info)].st_value);
}
*reloc_addr += sym_value;
break;
case R_386_RELATIVE:
if (map->l_type != lt_interpreter) /* Already done in dynamic linker. */
*reloc_addr += map->l_addr;
break;
case R_386_PC32:
*reloc_addr += sym_value - (Elf32_Addr) reloc_addr;
break;
case R_386_NONE: /* Alright, Wilbur. */
break;
default:
assert (! "unexpected dynamic reloc type");
break;
}
}
static inline void
elf_machine_lazy_rel (struct link_map *map, const Elf32_Rel *reloc)
{
Elf32_Addr *const reloc_addr = (void *) (map->l_addr + reloc->r_offset);
switch (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info))
{
case R_386_JMP_SLOT:
*reloc_addr += map->l_addr;
break;
default:
assert (! "unexpected PLT reloc type");
break;
}
}
/* The i386 never uses Elf32_Rela relocations. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_NO_RELA 1
/* Set up the loaded object described by L so its unrelocated PLT
entries will jump to the on-demand fixup code in dl-runtime.c. */
static inline void
elf_machine_runtime_setup (struct link_map *l, int lazy)
{
Elf32_Addr *got;
extern void _dl_runtime_resolve (Elf32_Word);
if (l->l_info[DT_JMPREL] && lazy)
{
/* The GOT entries for functions in the PLT have not yet been filled
in. Their initial contents will arrange when called to push an
offset into the .rel.plt section, push _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_[1],
and then jump to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE[2]. */
got = (Elf32_Addr *) (l->l_addr + l->l_info[DT_PLTGOT]->d_un.d_ptr);
got[1] = (Elf32_Addr) l; /* Identify this shared object. */
/* This function will get called to fix up the GOT entry indicated by
the offset on the stack, and then jump to the resolved address. */
got[2] = (Elf32_Addr) &_dl_runtime_resolve;
}
}
/* Mask identifying addresses reserved for the user program,
where the dynamic linker should not map anything. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_USER_ADDRESS_MASK 0xf8000000UL
/* Initial entry point code for the dynamic linker.
The C function `_dl_start' is the real entry point;
its return value is the user program's entry point. */
#define RTLD_START asm ("\
.text\n\
.globl _start\n\
.globl _dl_start_user\n\
_start:\n\
call _dl_start\n\
_dl_start_user:\n\
# Save the user entry point address in %edi.\n\
movl %eax, %edi\n\
# Point %ebx at the GOT.
call 0f\n\
0: popl %ebx\n\
addl $_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_+[.-0b], %ebx\n\
# See if we were run as a command with the executable file\n\
# name as an extra leading argument.\n\
movl _dl_skip_args@GOT(%ebx), %eax\n\
movl (%eax),%eax\n\
# Pop the original argument count.\n\
popl %ecx\n\
# Subtract _dl_skip_args from it.\n\
subl %eax, %ecx\n\
# Adjust the stack pointer to skip _dl_skip_args words.\n\
leal (%esp,%eax,4), %esp\n\
# Push back the modified argument count.\n\
pushl %ecx\n\
# Call _dl_init_next to return the address of an initializer\n\
# function to run.\n\
0: call _dl_init_next@PLT\n\
# Check for zero return, when out of initializers.\n\
testl %eax,%eax\n\
jz 1f\n\
# Call the shared object initializer function.\n\
# NOTE: We depend only on the registers (%ebx and %edi)\n\
# and the return address pushed by this call;\n\
# the initializer is called with the stack just\n\
# as it appears on entry, and it is free to move\n\
# the stack around, as long as it winds up jumping to\n\
# the return address on the top of the stack.\n\
call *%eax\n\
# Loop to call _dl_init_next for the next initializer.\n\
jmp 0b\n\
1: # Pass our finalizer function to the user in %edx, as per ELF ABI.\n\
movl _dl_fini@GOT(%ebx), %edx\n\
# Jump to the user's entry point.\n\
jmp *%edi\n\
");