/* Resolve function pointers to VDSO functions.
Copyright (C) 2005-2019 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 Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 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
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
. */
#ifndef _LIBC_VDSO_H
#define _LIBC_VDSO_H
#include
#include
extern int (*VDSO_SYMBOL(gettimeofday)) (struct timeval *, void *)
attribute_hidden;
extern int (*VDSO_SYMBOL(clock_gettime)) (clockid_t, struct timespec *);
extern int (*VDSO_SYMBOL(clock_getres)) (clockid_t, struct timespec *);
extern unsigned long long (*VDSO_SYMBOL(get_tbfreq)) (void);
extern int (*VDSO_SYMBOL(getcpu)) (unsigned *, unsigned *);
extern time_t (*VDSO_SYMBOL(time)) (time_t *);
#if defined(__PPC64__) || defined(__powerpc64__)
extern void *VDSO_SYMBOL(sigtramp_rt64);
#else
extern void *VDSO_SYMBOL(sigtramp32);
extern void *VDSO_SYMBOL(sigtramp_rt32);
#endif
#if (defined(__PPC64__) || defined(__powerpc64__)) && _CALL_ELF != 2
/* The correct solution is for _dl_vdso_vsym to return the address of the OPD
for the kernel VDSO function. That address would then be stored in the
__vdso_* variables and returned as the result of the IFUNC resolver function.
Yet, the kernel does not contain any OPD entries for the VDSO functions
(incomplete implementation). However, PLT relocations for IFUNCs still expect
the address of an OPD to be returned from the IFUNC resolver function (since
PLT entries on PPC64 are just copies of OPDs). The solution for now is to
create an artificial static OPD for each VDSO function returned by a resolver
function. The TOC value is set to a non-zero value to avoid triggering lazy
symbol resolution via .glink0/.plt0 for a zero TOC (requires thread-safe PLT
sequences) when the dynamic linker isn't prepared for it e.g. RTLD_NOW. None
of the kernel VDSO routines use the TOC or AUX values so any non-zero value
will work. Note that function pointer comparisons will not use this artificial
static OPD since those are resolved via ADDR64 relocations and will point at
the non-IFUNC default OPD for the symbol. Lastly, because the IFUNC relocations
are processed immediately at startup the resolver functions and this code need
not be thread-safe, but if the caller writes to a PLT slot it must do so in a
thread-safe manner with all the required barriers. */
#define VDSO_IFUNC_RET(value) \
({ \
static Elf64_FuncDesc vdso_opd = { .fd_toc = ~0x0 }; \
vdso_opd.fd_func = (Elf64_Addr)value; \
&vdso_opd; \
})
#else
#define VDSO_IFUNC_RET(value) ((void *) (value))
#endif
#endif /* _LIBC_VDSO_H */