glibc/sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h
Ulrich Drepper 0a63529d38 Update.
2000-04-03  Ulrich Drepper  <drepper@redhat.com>

	* sysdeps/i386/dl-machine.h (RTLD_START): Squeeze one more
	instruction out of the code.
2000-04-03 07:05:57 +00:00

392 lines
12 KiB
C

/* Machine-dependent ELF dynamic relocation inline functions. i386 version.
Copyright (C) 1995,96,97,98,99,2000 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., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
#ifndef dl_machine_h
#define dl_machine_h
#define ELF_MACHINE_NAME "i386"
#include <sys/param.h>
/* Return nonzero iff E_MACHINE is compatible with the running host. */
static inline int __attribute__ ((unused))
elf_machine_matches_host (Elf32_Half e_machine)
{
switch (e_machine)
{
case EM_386:
return 1;
default:
return 0;
}
}
/* Return the link-time address of _DYNAMIC. Conveniently, this is the
first element of the GOT. This must be inlined in a function which
uses global data. */
static inline Elf32_Addr __attribute__ ((unused))
elf_machine_dynamic (void)
{
register Elf32_Addr *got asm ("%ebx");
return *got;
}
/* Return the run-time load address of the shared object. */
static inline Elf32_Addr __attribute__ ((unused))
elf_machine_load_address (void)
{
Elf32_Addr addr;
asm ("leal _dl_start@GOTOFF(%%ebx), %0\n"
"subl _dl_start@GOT(%%ebx), %0"
: "=r" (addr) : : "cc");
return addr;
}
#ifndef PROF
/* We add a declaration of this function here so that in dl-runtime.c
the ELF_MACHINE_RUNTIME_TRAMPOLINE macro really can pass the parameters
in registers.
We cannot use this scheme for profiling because the _mcount call
destroys the passed register information. */
static ElfW(Addr) fixup (struct link_map *l, ElfW(Word) reloc_offset)
__attribute__ ((regparm (2), unused));
static ElfW(Addr) profile_fixup (struct link_map *l, ElfW(Word) reloc_offset,
ElfW(Addr) retaddr)
__attribute__ ((regparm (3), unused));
#endif
/* 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 int __attribute__ ((unused))
elf_machine_runtime_setup (struct link_map *l, int lazy, int profile)
{
Elf32_Addr *got;
extern void _dl_runtime_resolve (Elf32_Word);
extern void _dl_runtime_profile (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 *) D_PTR (l, l_info[DT_PLTGOT]);
got[1] = (Elf32_Addr) l; /* Identify this shared object. */
/* The got[2] entry contains the address of a function which gets
called to get the address of a so far unresolved function and
jump to it. The profiling extension of the dynamic linker allows
to intercept the calls to collect information. In this case we
don't store the address in the GOT so that all future calls also
end in this function. */
if (profile)
{
got[2] = (Elf32_Addr) &_dl_runtime_profile;
if (_dl_name_match_p (_dl_profile, l))
/* This is the object we are looking for. Say that we really
want profiling and the timers are started. */
_dl_profile_map = l;
}
else
/* 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;
}
return lazy;
}
/* This code is used in dl-runtime.c to call the `fixup' function
and then redirect to the address it returns. */
#ifndef PROF
# define ELF_MACHINE_RUNTIME_TRAMPOLINE asm ("\
.text
.globl _dl_runtime_resolve
.type _dl_runtime_resolve, @function
.align 16
_dl_runtime_resolve:
pushl %eax # Preserve registers otherwise clobbered.
pushl %ecx
pushl %edx
movl 16(%esp), %edx # Copy args pushed by PLT in register. Note
movl 12(%esp), %eax # that `fixup' takes its parameters in regs.
call fixup # Call resolver.
popl %edx # Get register content back.
popl %ecx
xchgl %eax, (%esp) # Get %eax contents end store function address.
ret $8 # Jump to function address.
.size _dl_runtime_resolve, .-_dl_runtime_resolve
.globl _dl_runtime_profile
.type _dl_runtime_profile, @function
.align 16
_dl_runtime_profile:
pushl %eax # Preserve registers otherwise clobbered.
pushl %ecx
pushl %edx
movl 20(%esp), %ecx # Load return address
movl 16(%esp), %edx # Copy args pushed by PLT in register. Note
movl 12(%esp), %eax # that `fixup' takes its parameters in regs.
call profile_fixup # Call resolver.
popl %edx # Get register content back.
popl %ecx
xchgl %eax, (%esp) # Get %eax contents end store function address.
ret $8 # Jump to function address.
.size _dl_runtime_profile, .-_dl_runtime_profile
.previous
");
#else
# define ELF_MACHINE_RUNTIME_TRAMPOLINE asm ("\
.text
.globl _dl_runtime_resolve
.globl _dl_runtime_profile
.type _dl_runtime_resolve, @function
.type _dl_runtime_profile, @function
.align 16
_dl_runtime_resolve:
_dl_runtime_profile:
pushl %eax # Preserve registers otherwise clobbered.
pushl %ecx
pushl %edx
movl 16(%esp), %edx # Push the arguments for `fixup'
movl 12(%esp), %eax
pushl %edx
pushl %eax
call fixup # Call resolver.
popl %edx # Pop the parameters
popl %ecx
popl %edx # Get register content back.
popl %ecx
xchgl %eax, (%esp) # Get %eax contents end store function address.
ret $8 # Jump to function address.
.size _dl_runtime_resolve, .-_dl_runtime_resolve
.size _dl_runtime_profile, .-_dl_runtime_profile
.previous
");
#endif
/* 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\
.align 16\n\
0: movl (%esp), %ebx\n\
ret\n\
.align 16\n\
.globl _start\n\
.globl _dl_start_user\n\
_start:\n\
pushl %esp\n\
call _dl_start\n\
popl %ebx\n\
_dl_start_user:\n\
# Save the user entry point address in %edi.\n\
movl %eax, %edi\n\
# Point %ebx at the GOT.
call 0b\n\
addl $_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_, %ebx\n\
# Store the highest stack address\n\
movl __libc_stack_end@GOT(%ebx), %eax\n\
movl %esp, (%eax)\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 %edx\n\
# Adjust the stack pointer to skip _dl_skip_args words.\n\
leal (%esp,%eax,4), %esp\n\
# Subtract _dl_skip_args from argc.\n\
subl %eax, %edx\n\
# Push argc back on the stack.\n\
push %edx\n\
# The special initializer gets called with the stack just\n\
# as the application's entry point will see it; it can\n\
# switch stacks if it moves these contents over.\n\
" RTLD_START_SPECIAL_INIT "\n\
# Load the parameters again.\n\
# (eax, edx, ecx, *--esp) = (_dl_loaded, argc, argv, envp)\n\
movl _dl_loaded@GOT(%ebx), %esi\n\
leal 8(%esp,%edx,4), %eax\n\
leal 4(%esp), %ecx\n\
pushl %eax\n\
movl (%esi), %eax\n\
# Call the function to run the initializers.\n\
call _dl_init@PLT\n\
# 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\
.previous\n\
");
#ifndef RTLD_START_SPECIAL_INIT
#define RTLD_START_SPECIAL_INIT /* nothing */
#endif
/* Nonzero iff TYPE should not be allowed to resolve to one of
the main executable's symbols, as for a COPY reloc. */
#define elf_machine_lookup_noexec_p(type) ((type) == R_386_COPY)
/* Nonzero iff TYPE describes relocation of a PLT entry, so
PLT entries should not be allowed to define the value. */
#define elf_machine_lookup_noplt_p(type) ((type) == R_386_JMP_SLOT)
/* A reloc type used for ld.so cmdline arg lookups to reject PLT entries. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_JMP_SLOT R_386_JMP_SLOT
/* The i386 never uses Elf32_Rela relocations. */
#define ELF_MACHINE_NO_RELA 1
/* We define an initialization functions. This is called very early in
_dl_sysdep_start. */
#define DL_PLATFORM_INIT dl_platform_init ()
extern const char *_dl_platform;
static inline void __attribute__ ((unused))
dl_platform_init (void)
{
if (_dl_platform != NULL && *_dl_platform == '\0')
/* Avoid an empty string which would disturb us. */
_dl_platform = NULL;
}
static inline void
elf_machine_fixup_plt (struct link_map *map, const Elf32_Rel *reloc,
Elf32_Addr *reloc_addr, Elf32_Addr value)
{
*reloc_addr = value;
}
/* Return the final value of a plt relocation. */
static inline Elf32_Addr
elf_machine_plt_value (struct link_map *map, const Elf32_Rel *reloc,
Elf32_Addr value)
{
return value;
}
#endif /* !dl_machine_h */
#ifdef RESOLVE
/* 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,
const Elf32_Sym *sym, const struct r_found_version *version,
Elf32_Addr *const reloc_addr)
{
if (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info) == R_386_RELATIVE)
{
#ifndef RTLD_BOOTSTRAP
if (map != &_dl_rtld_map) /* Already done in rtld itself. */
#endif
*reloc_addr += map->l_addr;
}
else if (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info) != R_386_NONE)
{
const Elf32_Sym *const refsym = sym;
Elf32_Addr value = RESOLVE (&sym, version, ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info));
if (sym)
value += sym->st_value;
switch (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info))
{
case R_386_COPY:
if (sym == NULL)
/* This can happen in trace mode if an object could not be
found. */
break;
if (sym->st_size > refsym->st_size
|| (sym->st_size < refsym->st_size && _dl_verbose))
{
const char *strtab;
strtab = (const char *) D_PTR (map, l_info[DT_STRTAB]);
_dl_sysdep_error (_dl_argv[0] ?: "<program name unknown>",
": Symbol `", strtab + refsym->st_name,
"' has different size in shared object, "
"consider re-linking\n", NULL);
}
memcpy (reloc_addr, (void *) value, MIN (sym->st_size,
refsym->st_size));
break;
case R_386_GLOB_DAT:
case R_386_JMP_SLOT:
*reloc_addr = value;
break;
case R_386_32:
{
#ifndef RTLD_BOOTSTRAP
/* This is defined in rtld.c, but nowhere in the static
libc.a; make the reference weak so static programs can
still link. This declaration cannot be done when
compiling rtld.c (i.e. #ifdef RTLD_BOOTSTRAP) because
rtld.c contains the common defn for _dl_rtld_map, which
is incompatible with a weak decl in the same file. */
weak_extern (_dl_rtld_map);
if (map == &_dl_rtld_map)
/* 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. */
value -= map->l_addr + refsym->st_value;
#endif
*reloc_addr += value;
break;
}
case R_386_PC32:
*reloc_addr += (value - (Elf32_Addr) reloc_addr);
break;
default:
_dl_reloc_bad_type (map, ELFW(R_TYPE) (reloc->r_info), 0);
break;
}
}
}
static inline void
elf_machine_lazy_rel (struct link_map *map,
Elf32_Addr l_addr, const Elf32_Rel *reloc)
{
Elf32_Addr *const reloc_addr = (void *) (l_addr + reloc->r_offset);
/* Check for unexpected PLT reloc type. */
if (ELF32_R_TYPE (reloc->r_info) == R_386_JMP_SLOT)
*reloc_addr += l_addr;
else
_dl_reloc_bad_type (map, ELFW(R_TYPE) (reloc->r_info), 1);
}
#endif /* RESOLVE */