The need to maintain elf/elf.h and scripts/glibcelf.py in parallel
results in a backporting hazard: they need to be kept in sync to
avoid elf/tst-glibcelf consistency check failures. glibcelf (unlike
tst-glibcelf) does not use the C implementation to extract constants.
This applies the additional glibcpp syntax checks to <elf.h>.
This changereplaces the types derived from Python enum types with
custom types _TypedConstant, _IntConstant, and _FlagConstant. These
types have fewer safeguards, but this also allows incremental
construction and greater flexibility for grouping constants among
the types. Architectures-specific named constants are now added
as members into their superclasses (but value-based lookup is
still restricted to generic constants only).
Consequently, check_duplicates in elf/tst-glibcelf has been adjusted
to accept differently-named constants of the same value if their
subtypes are distinct. The ordering check for named constants
has been dropped because they are no longer strictly ordered.
Further test adjustments: Some of the type names are different.
The new types do not support iteration (because it is unclear
whether iteration should cover the all named values (including
architecture-specific constants), or only the generic named values),
so elf/tst-glibcelf now uses by_name explicit (to get all constants).
PF_HP_SBP and PF_PARISC_SBP are now of distinct types (PfHP and
PfPARISC), so they are how both present on the Python side. EM_NUM
and PT_NUM are filtered (which was an oversight in the old
conversion).
The new version of glibcelf should also be compatible with earlier
Python versions because it no longer depends on the enum module and its
advanced features.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
The implementation in _dl_close_worker requires that the first
element of l_initfini is always this very map (“We are always the
zeroth entry, and since we don't include ourselves in the
dependency analysis start at 1.”). Rather than fixing that
assumption, this commit adds an implementation of the force_first
argument to the new dependency sorting algorithm. This also means
that the directly dlopen'ed shared object is always initialized last,
which is the least surprising behavior in the presence of cycles.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
make-4.4 will add long flags to MAKEFLAGS variable:
* WARNING: Backward-incompatibility!
Previously only simple (one-letter) options were added to the MAKEFLAGS
variable that was visible while parsing makefiles. Now, all options
are available in MAKEFLAGS.
This causes locale builds to fail when long options are used:
$ make --shuffle
...
make -C localedata install-locales
make: invalid shuffle mode: '1662724426r'
The change fixes it by passing eash option via whitespace and dashes.
That way option is appended to both single-word form and whitespace
separated form.
While at it fixed --silent mode detection in $(MAKEFLAGS) by filtering
out --long-options. Otherwise options like --shuffle flag enable silent
mode unintentionally. $(silent-make) variable consolidates the checks.
Resolves: BZ# 29564
CC: Paul Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
CC: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@gotplt.org>
Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyich@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
Commit dad90d5282 added glibc-hwcaps
support for LD_LIBRARY_PATH and, for this, it adjusted the total
string size required in _dl_important_hwcaps. However, in doing so
it inadvertently altered the calculation of the size required for
the power set strings, as the computation of the power set string
size depended on the first value assigned to the total variable,
which is later shifted, resulting in overallocation of string
space. Fix this now by using a different variable to hold the
string size required for glibc-hwcaps.
Signed-off-by: Javier Pello <devel@otheo.eu>
This did not cause a warning before because the token sequence for
the two definitions was identical.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The d7703d3176 changed how vDSO like
dependencies are printed, instead of just the name and address it
follows other libraries mode and prints 'name => path'.
Unfortunately, this broke some ldd consumer that uses the output to
filter out the program's dependencies. For instance CMake
bundleutilities module [1], where GetPrequirite uses the regex to filter
out 'name => path' [2].
This patch restore the previous way to print just the name and the
mapping address.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
[1] https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/tree/master/Tests/BundleUtilities
[2] https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/blob/master/Modules/GetPrerequisites.cmake#L733
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
libc_map is never reset to NULL, neither during dlclose nor on a
dlopen call which reuses the namespace structure. As a result, if a
namespace is reused, its libc is not initialized properly. The most
visible result is a crash in the <ctype.h> functions.
To prevent similar bugs on namespace reuse from surfacing,
unconditionally initialize the chosen namespace to zero using memset.
This reverts commit 6f85dbf102.
Once this change hits the release branches, it will require relinking
of all statically linked applications before static dlopen works
again, for the majority of updates on release branches: The NEWS file
is regularly updated with bug references, so the __libc_early_init
suffix changes, and static dlopen cannot find the function anymore.
While this ABI check is still technically correct (we do require
rebuilding & relinking after glibc updates to keep static dlopen
working), it is too drastic for stable release branches.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The files NEWS, include/link.h, and sysdeps/generic/ldsodefs.h
contribute to the version fingerprint used for detection. The
fingerprint can be further refined using the --with-extra-version-id
configure argument.
_dl_call_libc_early_init is replaced with _dl_lookup_libc_early_init.
The new function is used store a pointer to libc.so's
__libc_early_init function in the libc_map_early_init member of the
ld.so namespace structure. This function pointer can then be called
directly, so the separate invocation function is no longer needed.
The versioned symbol lookup needs the symbol versioning data
structures, so the initialization of libc_map and libc_map_early_init
is now done from _dl_check_map_versions, after this information
becomes available. (_dl_map_object_from_fd does not set this up
in time, so the initialization code had to be moved from there.)
This means that the separate initialization code can be removed from
dl_main because _dl_check_map_versions covers all maps, including
the initial executable loaded by the kernel. The lookup still happens
before relocation and the invocation of IFUNC resolvers, so IFUNC
resolvers are protected from ABI mismatch.
The __libc_early_init function pointer is not protected because
so little code runs between the pointer write and the invocation
(only dynamic linker code and IFUNC resolvers).
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
ELF and GNU hashes can now be computed using the elf_hash and
gnu_hash functions.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The test is valid for all TLS models, but we want to make a reasonable
effort to test the GNU2 model specifically. For example, aarch64
defaults to GNU2, but does not have -mtls-dialect=gnu2, and the test
was not run there.
Suggested-by: Martin Coufal <mcoufal@redhat.com>
GCC normally does this optimization for us in
strlen_pass::handle_builtin_strcpy but only for optimized
build. To avoid needing to include strcpy.S in the rtld build to
support the debug build, just do the optimization by hand.
The older libc versions are obsolete for over twenty years now.
This patch removes the special flags for libc5 and libc4 and assumes
that all libraries cached are libc6 compatible and use FLAG_ELF_LIBC6.
Checked with a build for all affected architectures.
Co-authored-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Redirect internal assertion failures to __libc_assert_fail, based on
based on __libc_message, which writes directly to STDERR_FILENO
and calls abort. Also disable message translation and reword the
error message slightly (adjusting stdlib/tst-bz20544 accordingly).
As a result of these changes, malloc no longer needs its own
redefinition of __assert_fail.
__libc_assert_fail needs to be stubbed out during rtld dependency
analysis because the rtld rebuilds turn __libc_assert_fail into
__assert_fail, which is unconditionally provided by elf/dl-minimal.c.
This change is not possible for the public assert macro and its
__assert_fail function because POSIX requires that the diagnostic
is written to stderr.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The fix done b2cd93fce6 does not really
work since macro strification does not expand the sizeof nor the
arithmetic operation.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
NODELETE status is propagated from the referencing object to the
referenced object, not the other way round. The code is correct, only
the log message has the wrong direction.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
Using -Werror and -DNDEBUG at the same time will trigger the
following compiler error:
cache.c: In function 'save_cache':
cache.c:758:15: error: unused variable 'old_offset' [-Werror=unused-variable]
758 | off64_t old_offset = lseek64 (fd, extension_offset, SEEK_SET);
| ^~~~~~~~~~
-DNDEBUG disables the assertion, making old_offset unused.
Use __attribute__ ((unused)) to disable this warning.
By adding an internal alias to avoid the GOT indirection.
On some architecture, __libc_single_thread may be accessed through
copy relocations and thus it requires to update also the copies
default copy.
This is done by adding a new internal macro,
libc_hidden_data_{proto,def}, which has an addition argument that
specifies the alias name (instead of default __GI_ one).
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
If an executable has copy relocations for extern protected data, that
can only work if the library containing the definition is built with
assumptions (a) the compiler emits GOT-generating relocations (b) the
linker produces R_*_GLOB_DAT instead of R_*_RELATIVE. Otherwise the
library uses its own definition directly and the executable accesses a
stale copy. Note: the GOT relocations defeat the purpose of protected
visibility as an optimization, but allow rtld to make the executable and
library use the same copy when copy relocations are present, but it
turns out this never worked perfectly.
ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA has strange semantics when both
a.so and b.so define protected var and the executable copy relocates
var: b.so accesses its own copy even with GLOB_DAT. The behavior change
is from commit 62da1e3b00 (x86) and then
copied to nios2 (ae5eae7cfc) and arc
(0e7d930c4c).
Without ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA, b.so accesses the copy
relocated data like a.so.
There is now a warning for copy relocation on protected symbol since
commit 7374c02b68. It's extremely
unlikely anyone relies on the ELF_RTYPE_CLASS_EXTERN_PROTECTED_DATA
behavior, so let's remove it: this removes a check in the symbol lookup
code.
Newer versions of GNU grep (after grep 3.7, not inclusive) will warn on
'egrep' and 'fgrep' invocations.
Convert usages within the tree to their expanded non-aliased counterparts
to avoid irritating warnings during ./configure and the test suite.
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
When the first object providing foo defines both foo@v1 and foo@@v2,
dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "foo") returns foo@v1 while dlsym(RTLD_DEFAULT, "foo")
returns foo@@v2. The issue is that RTLD_DEFAULT uses the
DL_LOOKUP_RETURN_NEWEST flag while RTLD_NEXT doesn't. Fix the RTLD_NEXT
branch to use DL_LOOKUP_RETURN_NEWEST.
Note: the new behavior matches FreeBSD rtld. Future sanitizers will not
need to add versioned interceptors like https://reviews.llvm.org/D96348
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
An __always_inline static function is better to find where exactly a
crash happens, so one can step into the function with GDB.
Reviewed-by: Fangrui Song <maskray@google.com>
Unroll slightly and enforce good instruction scheduling. This improves
performance on out-of-order machines. The unrolling allows for
pipelined multiplies.
As well, as an optional sysdep, reorder the operations and prevent
reassosiation for better scheduling and higher ILP. This commit
only adds the barrier for x86, although it should be either no
change or a win for any architecture.
Unrolling further started to induce slowdowns for sizes [0, 4]
but can help the loop so if larger sizes are the target further
unrolling can be beneficial.
Results for _dl_new_hash
Benchmarked on Tigerlake: 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-1165G7 @ 2.80GHz
Time as Geometric Mean of N=30 runs
Geometric of all benchmark New / Old: 0.674
type, length, New Time, Old Time, New Time / Old Time
fixed, 0, 2.865, 2.72, 1.053
fixed, 1, 3.567, 2.489, 1.433
fixed, 2, 2.577, 3.649, 0.706
fixed, 3, 3.644, 5.983, 0.609
fixed, 4, 4.211, 6.833, 0.616
fixed, 5, 4.741, 9.372, 0.506
fixed, 6, 5.415, 9.561, 0.566
fixed, 7, 6.649, 10.789, 0.616
fixed, 8, 8.081, 11.808, 0.684
fixed, 9, 8.427, 12.935, 0.651
fixed, 10, 8.673, 14.134, 0.614
fixed, 11, 10.69, 15.408, 0.694
fixed, 12, 10.789, 16.982, 0.635
fixed, 13, 12.169, 18.411, 0.661
fixed, 14, 12.659, 19.914, 0.636
fixed, 15, 13.526, 21.541, 0.628
fixed, 16, 14.211, 23.088, 0.616
fixed, 32, 29.412, 52.722, 0.558
fixed, 64, 65.41, 142.351, 0.459
fixed, 128, 138.505, 295.625, 0.469
fixed, 256, 291.707, 601.983, 0.485
random, 2, 12.698, 12.849, 0.988
random, 4, 16.065, 15.857, 1.013
random, 8, 19.564, 21.105, 0.927
random, 16, 23.919, 26.823, 0.892
random, 32, 31.987, 39.591, 0.808
random, 64, 49.282, 71.487, 0.689
random, 128, 82.23, 145.364, 0.566
random, 256, 152.209, 298.434, 0.51
Co-authored-by: Alexander Monakov <amonakov@ispras.ru>
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
No change to the code other than moving the function to
dl-new-hash.h. Changed name so its now in the reserved namespace.
Reviewed-by: Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>
_dl_skip_args is always 0, so the target specific code that modifies
argv after relro protection is applied is no longer used.
After the patch relro protection is applied to _dl_argv consistently
on all targets.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
When an executable is invoked as
./ld.so [ld.so-args] ./exe [exe-args]
then the argv is adujusted in ld.so before calling the entry point of
the executable so ld.so args are not visible to it. On most targets
this requires moving argv, env and auxv on the stack to ensure correct
stack alignment at the entry point. This had several issues:
- The code for this adjustment on the stack is written in asm as part
of the target specific ld.so _start code which is hard to maintain.
- The adjustment is done after _dl_start returns, where it's too late
to update GLRO(dl_auxv), as it is already readonly, so it points to
memory that was clobbered by the adjustment. This is bug 23293.
- _environ is also wrong in ld.so after the adjustment, but it is
likely not used after _dl_start returns so this is not user visible.
- _dl_argv was updated, but for this it was moved out of relro, which
changes security properties across targets unnecessarily.
This patch introduces a generic _dl_start_args_adjust function that
handles the argument adjustments after ld.so processed its own args
and before relro protection is applied.
The same algorithm is used on all targets, _dl_skip_args is now 0, so
existing target specific adjustment code is no longer used. The bug
affects aarch64, alpha, arc, arm, csky, ia64, nios2, s390-32 and sparc,
other targets don't need the change in principle, only for consistency.
The GNU Hurd start code relied on _dl_skip_args after dl_main returned,
now it checks directly if args were adjusted and fixes the Hurd startup
data accordingly.
Follow up patches can remove _dl_skip_args and DL_ARGV_NOT_RELRO.
Tested on aarch64-linux-gnu and cross tested on i686-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
The Linux version used by i686 and m68k provide three overrrides for
generic code:
1. DISTINGUISH_LIB_VERSIONS to print additional information when
libc5 is used by a dependency.
2. EXTRA_LD_ENVVARS to that enabled LD_LIBRARY_VERSION environment
variable.
3. EXTRA_UNSECURE_ENVVARS to add two environment variables related
to aout support.
None are really requires, it has some decades since libc5 or aout
suppported was removed and Linux even remove support for aout files.
The LD_LIBRARY_VERSION is also dead code, dl_correct_cache_id is not
used anywhere.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
The kernel version check is used to avoid glibc to run on older
kernels where some syscall are not available and fallback code are
not enabled to handle graciously fail. However, it does not prevent
if the kernel does not correctly advertise its version through
vDSO note, uname or procfs.
Also kernel version checks are sometime not desirable by users,
where they want to deploy on different system with different kernel
version knowing the minimum set of syscall is always presented on
such systems.
The kernel version check has been removed along with the
LD_ASSUME_KERNEL environment variable. The minimum kernel used to
built glibc is still provided through NT_GNU_ABI_TAG ELF note and
also printed when libc.so is issued.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
This implements mmap fallback for a brk failure during TLS
allocation.
scripts/tls-elf-edit.py is updated to support the new patching method.
The script no longer requires that in the input object is of ET_DYN
type.
Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
When neither DT_HASH nor DT_GNU_HASH is present, the code scans
[DT_SYMTAB, DT_STRTAB). However, there is no guarantee that .dynstr
immediately follows .dynsym (e.g. lld typically places .gnu.version
after .dynsym).
In the absence of a hash table, symbol lookup will always fail
(map->l_nbuckets == 0 in dl-lookup.c) as if the object has no symbol, so
it seems fair for dladdr to do the same.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>