NAME
dlopen
, fdlopen
,
dlsym
, dlfunc
,
dlerror
, dlclose
—
programmatic interface to the dynamic
linker
LIBRARY
library “libc”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<dlfcn.h>
void *
dlopen
(const
char *path, int
mode);
void *
fdlopen
(int
fd, int mode);
void *
dlsym
(void
* restrict handle, const
char * restrict symbol);
dlfunc_t
dlfunc
(void
* restrict handle, const
char * restrict symbol);
char *
dlerror
(void);
int
dlclose
(void
*handle);
DESCRIPTION
These functions provide a simple programmatic interface to the services of the dynamic linker. Operations are provided to add new shared objects to a program's address space, to obtain the address bindings of symbols defined by such objects, and to remove such objects when their use is no longer required.The
dlopen
()
function provides access to the shared object in path,
returning a descriptor that can be used for later references to the object
in calls to dlsym
() and
dlclose
(). If path was not in
the address space prior to the call to dlopen
(), it
is placed in the address space. When an object is first loaded into the
address space in this way, its function _init
(), if
any, is called by the dynamic linker. If path has
already been placed in the address space in a previous call to
dlopen
(), it is not added a second time, although a
reference count of dlopen
() operations on
path is maintained. A null pointer supplied for
path is interpreted as a reference to the main
executable of the process. The mode argument controls
the way in which external function references from the loaded object are
bound to their referents. It must contain one of the following values,
possibly ORed with additional flags which will be described
subsequently:
RTLD_LAZY
- Each external function reference is resolved when the function is first called.
RTLD_NOW
- All external function references are bound immediately by
dlopen
().
RTLD_LAZY
is normally
preferred, for reasons of efficiency. However,
RTLD_NOW
is useful to ensure that any undefined
symbols are discovered during the call to
dlopen
().
One of the following flags may be ORed into the mode argument:
RTLD_GLOBAL
- Symbols from this shared object and its directed acyclic graph (DAG) of needed objects will be available for resolving undefined references from all other shared objects.
RTLD_LOCAL
- Symbols in this shared object and its DAG of needed objects will be available for resolving undefined references only from other objects in the same DAG. This is the default, but it may be specified explicitly with this flag.
RTLD_TRACE
- When set, causes dynamic linker to exit after loading all objects needed
by this shared object and printing a summary which includes the absolute
pathnames of all objects, to standard output. With this flag
dlopen
() will return to the caller only in the case of error. RTLD_NODELETE
- Prevents unload of the loaded object on
dlclose
(). The same behaviour may be requested by-z nodelete
option of the static linker ld(1). RTLD_NOLOAD
- Only return valid handle for the object if it is already loaded in the
process address space, otherwise
NULL
is returned. Other mode flags may be specified, which will be applied for promotion for the found object.
If
dlopen
()
fails, it returns a null pointer, and sets an error condition which may be
interrogated with dlerror
().
The
fdlopen
()
function is similar to dlopen
(), but it takes the
file descriptor argument fd, which is used for the
file operations needed to load an object into the address space. The file
descriptor fd is not closed by the function regardless
a result of execution, but a duplicate of the file descriptor is. This may
be important if a
lockf(3) lock is held on the passed descriptor. The
fd argument -1 is interpreted as a reference to the
main executable of the process, similar to NULL value
for the name argument to
dlopen
(). The fdlopen
()
function can be used by the code that needs to perform additional checks on
the loaded objects, to prevent races with symlinking or renames.
The
dlsym
()
function returns the address binding of the symbol described in the
null-terminated character string symbol, as it occurs
in the shared object identified by handle. The symbols
exported by objects added to the address space by
dlopen
() can be accessed only through calls to
dlsym
(). Such symbols do not supersede any
definition of those symbols already present in the address space when the
object is loaded, nor are they available to satisfy normal dynamic linking
references.
If
dlsym
() is
called with the special handle
NULL
, it is interpreted as a reference to the
executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared
object can reference its own symbols.
If
dlsym
() is
called with the special handle
RTLD_DEFAULT
, the search for the symbol follows the
algorithm used for resolving undefined symbols when objects are loaded. The
objects searched are as follows, in the given order:
- The referencing object itself (or the object from which the call to
dlsym
() is made), if that object was linked using the-Bsymbolic
option to ld(1). - All objects loaded at program start-up.
- All objects loaded via
dlopen
() with theRTLD_GLOBAL
flag set in the mode argument. - All objects loaded via
dlopen
() which are in needed-object DAGs that also contain the referencing object.
If
dlsym
() is
called with the special handle
RTLD_NEXT
, then the search for the symbol is limited
to the shared objects which were loaded after the one issuing the call to
dlsym
(). Thus, if the function is called from the
main program, all the shared libraries are searched. If it is called from a
shared library, all subsequent shared libraries are searched.
RTLD_NEXT
is useful for implementing wrappers around
library functions. For example, a wrapper function
getpid
()
could access the “real” getpid
() with
dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "getpid")
. (Actually, the
dlfunc
() interface, below, should be used, since
getpid
() is a function and not a data object.)
If
dlsym
() is
called with the special handle
RTLD_SELF
, then the search for the symbol is limited
to the shared object issuing the call to dlsym
() and
those shared objects which were loaded after it.
The
dlsym
()
function returns a null pointer if the symbol cannot be found, and sets an
error condition which may be queried with
dlerror
().
The
dlfunc
()
function implements all of the behavior of dlsym
(),
but has a return type which can be cast to a function pointer without
triggering compiler diagnostics. (The dlsym
()
function returns a data pointer; in the C standard, conversions between data
and function pointer types are undefined. Some compilers and
lint(1) utilities warn about such casts.) The precise return type of
dlfunc
() is unspecified; applications must cast it
to an appropriate function pointer type.
The
dlerror
()
function returns a null-terminated character string describing the last
error that occurred during a call to dlopen
(),
dladdr
(),
dlinfo
(),
dlsym
(), dlfunc
(), or
dlclose
(). If no such error has occurred,
dlerror
() returns a null pointer. At each call to
dlerror
(), the error indication is reset. Thus in
the case of two calls to dlerror
(), where the second
call follows the first immediately, the second call will always return a
null pointer.
The
dlclose
()
function deletes a reference to the shared object referenced by
handle. If the reference count drops to 0, the object
is removed from the address space, and handle is
rendered invalid. Just before removing a shared object in this way, the
dynamic linker calls the object's
_fini
()
function, if such a function is defined by the object. If
dlclose
() is successful, it returns a value of 0.
Otherwise it returns -1, and sets an error condition that can be
interrogated with dlerror
().
The object-intrinsic functions
_init
() and
_fini
()
are called with no arguments, and are not expected to return values.
NOTES
ELF executables need to be linked using the
-export-dynamic
option to
ld(1)
for symbols defined in the executable to become visible to
dlsym
().
Other ELF platforms require linking with
library “libdl” to provide
dlopen
()
and other functions. FreeBSD does not require
linking with the library, but supports it for compatibility.
In previous implementations, it was necessary to prepend an
underscore to all external symbols in order to gain symbol compatibility
with object code compiled from the C language. This is still the case when
using the (obsolete) -aout
option to the C language
compiler.
ERRORS
The dlopen
(),
fdlopen
(), dlsym
(), and
dlfunc
() functions return a null pointer in the
event of errors. The dlclose
() function returns 0 on
success, or -1 if an error occurred. Whenever an error has been detected, a
message detailing it can be retrieved via a call to
dlerror
().