.\" This source code is a product of Sun Microsystems, Inc. and is provided .\" for unrestricted use provided that this legend is included on all tape .\" media and as a part of the software program in whole or part. Users .\" may copy or modify this source code without charge, but are not authorized .\" to license or distribute it to anyone else except as part of a product or .\" program developed by the user. .\" .\" THIS PROGRAM CONTAINS SOURCE CODE COPYRIGHTED BY SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. .\" SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC., MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS ABOUT THE SUITABLITY .\" OF SUCH SOURCE CODE FOR ANY PURPOSE. IT IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT .\" EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. DISCLAIMS .\" ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO SUCH SOURCE CODE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED .\" WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN .\" NO EVENT SHALL SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT, .\" INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING .\" FROM USE OF SUCH SOURCE CODE, REGARDLESS OF THE THEORY OF LIABILITY. .\" .\" This source code is provided with no support and without any obligation on .\" the part of Sun Microsystems, Inc. to assist in its use, correction, .\" modification or enhancement. .\" .\" SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY WITH RESPECT TO THE .\" INFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHTS, TRADE SECRETS OR ANY PATENTS BY THIS .\" SOURCE CODE OR ANY PART THEREOF. .\" .\" Sun Microsystems, Inc. .\" 2550 Garcia Avenue .\" Mountain View, California 94043 .\" .\" Copyright (c) 1991 Sun Microsystems, Inc. .\" .\" @(#) dlopen.3 1.6 90/01/31 SMI .\" $FreeBSD: src/lib/libc/gen/dlopen.3,v 1.21 2002/05/29 19:35:13 wollman Exp $ .\" .Dd June 8, 2003 .Os .Dt DLOPEN 3 .Sh NAME .Nm dlopen , .Nm dlsym , .\" .Nm dlfunc , .Nm dlerror , .Nm dlclose .Nd programmatic interface to the dynamic linker .Sh SYNOPSIS .In dlfcn.h .Ft void * .Fn dlopen "const char *path" "int mode" .Ft void * .Fn dlsym "void * restrict handle" "const char * restrict symbol" .\" .Ft dlfunc_t .\" .Fn dlfunc "void * restrict handle" "const char * restrict symbol" .Ft const char * .Fn dlerror "void" .Ft int .Fn dlclose "void *handle" .Sh 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. All these functions use the native .Xr dyld 3 , .Xr NSModule 3 , and .Xr NSObjectFileImage 3 functions to provide a compatibility library so that common unix source code may be easily compiled. .Pp New code should use the native functions, not this compatibility layer, see the above manual pages for usage. .Pp .Fn dlopen provides access to the shared object in .Fa path , returning a descriptor that can be used for later references to the object in calls to .Fn dlsym and .Fn dlclose . If .Fa path was not in the address space prior to the call to .Fn dlopen , it is placed in the address space. When an object is first loaded into the address space in this way, its function .Fn _init , if any, is called. If .Fa path has already been placed in the address space in a previous call to .Fn dlopen , it is not added a second time, although a reference count of .Fn dlopen operations on .Fa path is maintained. A null pointer supplied for .Fa path is interpreted as a reference to the main executable of the process. .Fa mode 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: .Bl -tag -width RTLD_LAZYX .It Dv RTLD_LAZY Each external function reference is resolved when the function is first called. .It Dv RTLD_NOW All external function references are bound immediately by .Fn dlopen . .El .Pp .Dv RTLD_LAZY is normally preferred, for reasons of efficiency. However, .Dv RTLD_NOW is useful to ensure that any undefined symbols are discovered during the call to .Fn dlopen . .Pp One of the following flags may be ORed into the .Fa mode argument: .Bl -tag -width RTLD_GLOBALX .It Dv 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. This is the only opion available for objects linked with the -dylib flag to .Xr ld 1 .It Dv 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 for objects linked with the -bundle flag to .Xr ld 1 but it may be set explicitly with this flag. .El .Pp If .Fn dlopen fails, it returns a null pointer, and sets an error condition which may be interrogated with .Fn dlerror . .Pp The .Fn dlsym returns the address binding of the symbol described in the null-terminated character string .Fa symbol , as it occurs in the shared object identified by .Fa handle . The symbols exported by objects added to the address space by .Fn dlopen can be accessed only through calls to .Fn 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. .Pp See the note about underscores and C symbols, .Fn dlsym .\" and .\" .Fn dlfunc may or may not need to be called with an underscore prepended to the C function name, depending upon how this package was configured. .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_NEXT , then the search for the symbol is limited to the shared objects which were loaded after the one issuing the call to .Fn 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. .Dv RTLD_NEXT is useful for implementing wrappers around library functions. For example, a wrapper function .Fn getpid could access the .Dq real .Fn getpid with .Li dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, \&"getpid\&") . .\" (Actually, the .\" .Fn dlfunc .\" interface, below, should be used, since .\" .Fn getpid .\" is a function and not a data object.) .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_SELF , then the search for the symbol is limited to the shared object issuing the call to .Fn dlsym and those shared objects which were loaded after it. .Pp The .Fn dlsym function returns a null pointer if the symbol cannot be found, and sets an error condition which may be queried with .Fn dlerror . .Pp .\" The .\" .Fn dlfunc .\" function .\" implements all of the behavior of .\" .Fn dlsym , .\" but has a return type which can be cast to a function pointer without .\" triggering compiler diagnostics. .\" (The .\" .Fn dlsym .\" function .\" returns a data pointer; in the C standard, conversions between .\" data and function pointer types are undefined. .\" Some compilers and .\" .Xr lint 1 .\" utilities warn about such casts.) .\" The precise return type of .\" .Fn dlfunc .\" is unspecified; applications must cast it to an appropriate function pointer .\" type. .Pp The .Fn dlerror returns a null-terminated character string describing the last error that occurred during a call to .Fn dlopen , .Fn dlsym , or .Fn dlclose . If no such error has occurred, .Fn dlerror returns a null pointer. At each call to .Fn dlerror , the error indication is reset. Thus in the case of two calls to .Fn dlerror , where the second call follows the first immediately, the second call will always return a null pointer. .Pp .Fn dlclose deletes a reference to the shared object referenced by .Fa handle . If the reference count drops to 0, the object is removed from the address space, and .Fa handle is rendered invalid. Just before removing a shared object in this way, the object's .Fn _fini function is called, if such a function is defined by the object. If .Fn dlclose is successful, it returns a value of 0. Otherwise it returns -1, and sets an error condition that can be interrogated with .Fn dlerror . .Pp The object-intrinsic functions .Fn _init and .Fn _fini are called with no arguments, and are not expected to return values. .Sh NOTES In darwin objects, C symbols have an underscore prepended to the symbol name. So, the function .Fn getpid ends up in the object file as _getpid Most code assumes that there is no underscore and calls .Fn dlsym with .Fa symbol as \&"getpid\&" which would fail to find the symbol. .Pp Depending on how the dlcompat package was built, the .Fn dlsym function may, or may not, automatically prepend an underscore to the passed .Fa symbol to compensate for this. In this case calling .Fn dlsym with .Fa symbol as \&"getpid\&" does %%NOTPREPEND%% find the _getpid symbol. .Sh ERRORS .Fn dlopen and .Fn dlsym return a null pointer in the event of errors. .Fn dlclose 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 .Fn dlerror . .Sh AUTHORS The dlcompat package was written by Jorge Acereda and Peter O'Gorman .Pp This man page was borrowed from FreeBSD and modified, it originally came from Sun Microsystems, Inc. .Sh BUGS .Bl -bullet .It None of these rountines should be expected to work as advertised with MH_DYLIB files. They are always opened globally and may not be closed, RTLD_NOW is ignored for them. .It The search for symbols in objects which were loaded as a result of loading handle terminates too soon. .It None of the functions work as advertised for executables linked with the .Xr ld 1 flag -force_flat_namespace, or when the .Xr dyld 1 DYLD_FORCE_FLAT_NAMESPACE environment variable is set. This is because the .Fn NSLookupSymbolInImage function ignores the passed in mach_header in this case. .It The underscore or not issue is unnecessarily confusing. .El .Pp If you find any more, please contact Peter O'Gorman .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr ld 1 .Xr cc 1 .Xr NSModule 3 .Xr NSObjectFileImage 3 .Xr dyld 3