Mercurial > emacs
view src/unexsunos4.c @ 11788:3a2d34fad6fb make-3-73-3 make-3-74
AIX support from Tim Bell <tbel@afsmail.cern.ch>:
[_AIX] (LOAD_AVE_TYPE, FSCALE, NLIST_STRUCT): Define these for AIX.
(getloadavg) [_AIX]: Use `knlist' instead of `nlist'.
author | Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 10 May 1995 15:03:48 +0000 |
parents | 8c38245f7be4 |
children | 462dd843fd8c |
line wrap: on
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/* Unexec for Sunos 4 using shared libraries. Copyright (C) 1990, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs 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 General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* Contributed by Viktor Dukhovni. */ /* * Unexec for Berkeley a.out format + SUNOS shared libraries * The unexeced executable contains the __DYNAMIC area from the * original text file, and then the rest of data + bss + malloced area of * the current process. (The __DYNAMIC area is at the top of the process * data segment, we use "data_start" defined externally to mark the start * of the "real" data segment.) * * For programs that want to remap some of the data segment read only * a run_time_remap is provided. This attempts to remap largest area starting * and ending on page boundaries between "data_start" and "bndry" * For this it to figure out where the text file is located. A path search * is attempted after trying argv[0] and if all fails we simply do not remap * * One feature of run_time_remap () is mandatory: reseting the break. * * Note that we can no longer map data into the text segment, as this causes * the __DYNAMIC struct to become read only, breaking the runtime loader. * Thus we no longer need to mess with a private crt0.c, the standard one * will do just fine, since environ can live in the writable area between * __DYNAMIC and data_start, just make sure that pre-crt0.o (the name * is somewhat abused here) is loaded first! * */ #include <sys/param.h> #include <sys/mman.h> #include <sys/file.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <string.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <a.out.h> /* Do this after the above #include's in case a configuration file wants to define things for this file based on what <a.out.h> defines. */ #ifdef emacs #include <config.h> #endif #if defined (SUNOS4) || defined (__FreeBSD__) || defined (__NetBSD__) #define UNDO_RELOCATION #endif #ifdef UNDO_RELOCATION #include <link.h> #endif #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H #include <unistd.h> #endif /* NetBSD needs this bit, but SunOS does not have it. */ #ifndef MAP_FILE #define MAP_FILE 0 #endif /* * for programs other than emacs * define data_start + initialized here, and make sure * this object is loaded first! * emacs will define these elsewhere, and load the object containing * data_start (pre-crt0.o or firstfile.o?) first! * The custom crt0.o *must not* be loaded! */ #ifndef emacs static int data_start = 0; static int initialized = 0; #else extern int initialized; extern unsigned data_start; extern int pureptr; #endif extern char *getenv (); static unsigned brk_value; static struct exec nhdr; static int rd_only_len; static long cookie; unexec (new_name, a_name, bndry, bss_start, entry) char *new_name, *a_name; unsigned bndry, bss_start, entry; { int fd, new; char *old; struct exec ohdr; /* Allocate on the stack, not needed in the next life */ struct stat stat; if ((fd = open (a_name, O_RDONLY)) < 0) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: open: ", a_name); perror (a_name); exit (1); } if ((new = open (new_name, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT, 0666)) == -1) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: open: ", a_name); perror (new_name); exit (1); } if ((fstat (fd, &stat) == -1)) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", a_name); perror ("fstat"); exit (1); } old = (char *)mmap (0, stat.st_size, PROT_READ, MAP_FILE|MAP_SHARED, fd, 0); if (old == (char *)-1) { fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", a_name); perror ("mmap"); exit (1); } close (fd); nhdr = ohdr = (*(struct exec *)old); /* * Remember a magic cookie so we know we've got the right binary * when remapping. */ cookie = time (0); /* Save the break, it is reset to &_end (by ld.so?). */ brk_value = (unsigned) sbrk (0); /* * Round up data start to a page boundary (Lose if not a 2 power!) */ data_start = ((((int)&data_start) - 1) & ~(N_PAGSIZ (nhdr) - 1)) + N_PAGSIZ (nhdr); /* * Round down read only pages to a multiple of the page size */ if (bndry) rd_only_len = ((int)bndry & ~(N_PAGSIZ (nhdr) - 1)) - data_start; #ifndef emacs /* Have to do this some time before dumping the data */ initialized = 1; #endif /* Handle new data and bss sizes and optional new entry point. No one actually uses bss_start and entry, but tradition compels one to support them. Could complain if bss_start > brk_value, but the caller is *supposed* to know what she is doing. */ nhdr.a_data = (bss_start ? bss_start : brk_value) - N_DATADDR (nhdr); nhdr.a_bss = bss_start ? brk_value - bss_start : 0; if (entry) nhdr.a_entry = entry; /* * Write out the text segment with new header * Dynamic executables are ZMAGIC with N_TXTOFF==0 and the header * part of the text segment, but no need to rely on this. * So write the TEXT first, then go back replace the header. * Doing it in the other order is less general! */ lseek (new, N_TXTOFF (nhdr), L_SET); write (new, old + N_TXTOFF (ohdr), N_TXTOFF (ohdr) + ohdr.a_text); lseek (new, 0L, L_SET); write (new, &nhdr, sizeof (nhdr)); /* * Write out the head of the old data segment from the file not * from core, this has the unresolved __DYNAMIC relocation data * we need to reload */ lseek (new, N_DATOFF (nhdr), L_SET); write (new, old + N_DATOFF (ohdr), (int)&data_start - N_DATADDR (ohdr)); /* * Copy the rest of the data from core */ write (new, &data_start, N_BSSADDR (nhdr) - (int)&data_start); /* * Copy the symbol table and line numbers */ lseek (new, N_TRELOFF (nhdr), L_SET); write (new, old + N_TRELOFF (ohdr), stat.st_size - N_TRELOFF (ohdr)); /* Some other BSD systems use this file. We don't know whether this change is right for them. */ #ifdef UNDO_RELOCATION /* Undo the relocations done at startup by ld.so. It will do these relocations again when we start the dumped Emacs. Doing them twice gives incorrect results. */ { unsigned long daddr = N_DATADDR (ohdr); unsigned long rel, erel; #ifdef SUNOS4 extern struct link_dynamic _DYNAMIC; /* SunOS4.x's ld_rel is relative to N_TXTADDR. */ if (_DYNAMIC.ld_version < 2) { rel = _DYNAMIC.ld_un.ld_1->ld_rel + N_TXTADDR (ohdr); erel = _DYNAMIC.ld_un.ld_1->ld_hash + N_TXTADDR (ohdr); } else { rel = _DYNAMIC.ld_un.ld_2->ld_rel + N_TXTADDR (ohdr); erel = _DYNAMIC.ld_un.ld_2->ld_hash + N_TXTADDR (ohdr); } #ifdef sparc #define REL_INFO_TYPE struct reloc_info_sparc #else #define REL_INFO_TYPE struct relocation_info #endif /* sparc */ #define REL_TARGET_ADDRESS(r) (((REL_INFO_TYPE *)(r))->r_address) #endif /* SUNOS4 */ #if defined (__FreeBSD__) || defined (__NetBSD__) extern struct _dynamic _DYNAMIC; /* FreeBSD's LD_REL is a virtual address itself. */ rel = LD_REL (&_DYNAMIC); erel = rel + LD_RELSZ (&_DYNAMIC); #define REL_INFO_TYPE struct relocation_info #define REL_TARGET_ADDRESS(r) (((REL_INFO_TYPE *)(r))->r_address) #endif for (; rel < erel; rel += sizeof (REL_INFO_TYPE)) { /* This is the virtual address where ld.so will do relocation. */ unsigned long target = REL_TARGET_ADDRESS (rel); /* This is the offset in the data segment. */ unsigned long segoffset = target - daddr; /* If it is located below data_start, we have to do nothing here, because the old data has been already written to the location. */ if (target < (unsigned long)&data_start) continue; lseek (new, N_DATOFF (nhdr) + segoffset, L_SET); write (new, old + N_DATOFF (ohdr) + segoffset, sizeof (unsigned long)); } } #endif /* UNDO_RELOCATION */ fchmod (new, 0755); } void run_time_remap (progname) char *progname; { char aout[MAXPATHLEN]; register char *path, *p; /* Just in case */ if (!initialized) return; /* Restore the break */ brk ((char *) brk_value); /* If nothing to remap: we are done! */ if (rd_only_len == 0) return; /* * Attempt to find the executable * First try argv[0], will almost always succeed as shells tend to give * the full path from the hash list rather than using execvp () */ if (is_it (progname)) return; /* * If argv[0] is a full path and does not exist, not much sense in * searching further */ if (strchr (progname, '/')) return; /* * Try to search for argv[0] on the PATH */ path = getenv ("PATH"); if (path == NULL) return; while (*path) { /* copy through ':' or end */ for (p = aout; *p = *path; ++p, ++path) if (*p == ':') { ++path; /* move past ':' */ break; } *p++ = '/'; strcpy (p, progname); /* * aout is a candidate full path name */ if (is_it (aout)) return; } } is_it (filename) char *filename; { int fd; long filenames_cookie; struct exec hdr; /* * Open an executable and check for a valid header! * Can't bcmp the header with what we had, it may have been stripped! * so we may save looking at non executables with the same name, mostly * directories. */ fd = open (filename, O_RDONLY); if (fd != -1) { if (read (fd, &hdr, sizeof (hdr)) == sizeof (hdr) && !N_BADMAG (hdr) && N_DATOFF (hdr) == N_DATOFF (nhdr) && N_TRELOFF (hdr) == N_TRELOFF (nhdr)) { /* compare cookies */ lseek (fd, N_DATOFF (hdr) + (int)&cookie - N_DATADDR (hdr), L_SET); read (fd, &filenames_cookie, sizeof (filenames_cookie)); if (filenames_cookie == cookie) { /* Eureka */ /* * Do the mapping * The PROT_EXEC may not be needed, but it is safer this way. * should the shared library decide to indirect through * addresses in the data segment not part of __DYNAMIC */ mmap ((char *) data_start, rd_only_len, PROT_READ | PROT_EXEC, MAP_FILE | MAP_SHARED | MAP_FIXED, fd, N_DATOFF (hdr) + data_start - N_DATADDR (hdr)); close (fd); return 1; } } close (fd); } return 0; }