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1 .\" %%%LICENSE_START(PUBLIC_DOMAIN)
2 .\" This is in the public domain
3 .\" %%%LICENSE_END
4 .\"
5 .TH LD.SO 8 2017-05-03 "GNU" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
6 .SH NAME
7 ld.so, ld-linux.so \- dynamic linker/loader
8 .SH SYNOPSIS
9 The dynamic linker can be run either indirectly by running some
10 dynamically linked program or shared object
11 (in which case no command-line options
12 to the dynamic linker can be passed and, in the ELF case, the dynamic linker
13 which is stored in the
14 .B .interp
15 section of the program is executed) or directly by running:
16 .P
17 .I /lib/ld-linux.so.*
18 [OPTIONS] [PROGRAM [ARGUMENTS]]
19 .SH DESCRIPTION
20 The programs
21 .B ld.so
22 and
23 .B ld-linux.so*
24 find and load the shared objects (shared libraries) needed by a program,
25 prepare the program to run, and then run it.
26 .LP
27 Linux binaries require dynamic linking (linking at run time)
28 unless the
29 .B \-static
30 option was given to
31 .BR ld (1)
32 during compilation.
33 .LP
34 The program
35 .B ld.so
36 handles a.out binaries, a format used long ago;
37 .B ld-linux.so*
38 (\fI/lib/ld-linux.so.1\fP for libc5, \fI/lib/ld-linux.so.2\fP for glibc2)
39 handles ELF,
40 which everybody has been using for years now.
41 Otherwise, both have the same behavior, and use the same
42 support files and programs
43 .BR ldd (1),
44 .BR ldconfig (8),
45 and
46 .IR /etc/ld.so.conf .
47 .LP
48 When resolving shared object dependencies,
49 the dynamic linker first inspects each dependency
50 string to see if it contains a slash (this can occur if
51 a shared object pathname containing slashes was specified at link time).
52 If a slash is found, then the dependency string is interpreted as
53 a (relative or absolute) pathname,
54 and the shared object is loaded using that pathname.
55 .LP
56 If a shared object dependency does not contain a slash,
57 then it is searched for in the following order:
58 .IP o 3
59 Using the directories specified in the
60 DT_RPATH dynamic section attribute
61 of the binary if present and DT_RUNPATH attribute does not exist.
62 Use of DT_RPATH is deprecated.
63 .IP o
64 Using the environment variable
65 .BR LD_LIBRARY_PATH
66 (unless the executable is being run in secure-execution mode; see below).
67 in which case it is ignored.
68 .IP o
69 Using the directories specified in the
70 DT_RUNPATH dynamic section attribute
71 of the binary if present.
72 .IP o
73 From the cache file
74 .IR /etc/ld.so.cache ,
75 which contains a compiled list of candidate shared objects previously found
76 in the augmented library path.
77 If, however, the binary was linked with the
78 .B \-z nodeflib
79 linker option, shared objects in the default paths are skipped.
80 Shared objects installed in hardware capability directories (see below)
81 are preferred to other shared objects.
82 .IP o
83 In the default path
84 .IR /lib ,
85 and then
86 .IR /usr/lib .
87 (On some 64-bit architectures, the default paths for 64-bit shared objects are
88 .IR /lib64 ,
89 and then
90 .IR /usr/lib64 .)
91 If the binary was linked with the
92 .B \-z nodeflib
93 linker option, this step is skipped.
94 .SS Rpath token expansion
95 .PP
96 .B ld.so
97 understands certain token strings in an rpath specification
98 (DT_RPATH or DT_RUNPATH).
99 Those strings are substituted as follows:
100 .TP
101 .IR $ORIGIN " (or equivalently " ${ORIGIN} )
102 This expands to
103 the directory containing the program or shared object.
104 Thus, an application located in
105 .I somedir/app
106 could be compiled with
107
108 gcc \-Wl,\-rpath,\(aq$ORIGIN/../lib\(aq
109
110 so that it finds an associated shared object in
111 .I somedir/lib
112 no matter where
113 .I somedir
114 is located in the directory hierarchy.
115 This facilitates the creation of "turn-key" applications that
116 do not need to be installed into special directories,
117 but can instead be unpacked into any directory
118 and still find their own shared objects.
119 .TP
120 .IR $LIB " (or equivalently " ${LIB} )
121 This expands to
122 .I lib
123 or
124 .I lib64
125 depending on the architecture
126 (e.g., on x86-64, it expands to
127 .IR lib64
128 and
129 on x86-32, it expands to
130 .IR lib ).
131 .TP
132 .IR $PLATFORM " (or equivalently " ${PLATFORM} )
133 This expands to a string corresponding to the processor type
134 of the host system (e.g., "x86_64").
135 On some architectures, the Linux kernel doesn't provide a platform
136 string to the dynamic linker.
137 The value of this string is taken from the
138 .BR AT_PLATFORM
139 value in the auxiliary vector (see
140 .BR getauxval (3)).
141 .\" To get an idea of the places that $PLATFORM would match,
142 .\" look at the output of the following:
143 .\"
144 .\" mkdir /tmp/d
145 .\" LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/tmp/d strace -e open /bin/date 2>&1 | grep /tmp/d
146 .\"
147 .\" ld.so lets names be abbreviated, so $O will work for $ORIGIN;
148 .\" Don't do this!!
149 .SH OPTIONS
150 .TP
151 .B \-\-list
152 List all dependencies and how they are resolved.
153 .TP
154 .B \-\-verify
155 Verify that program is dynamically linked and this dynamic linker can handle
156 it.
157 .TP
158 .B \-\-inhibit-cache
159 Do not use
160 .IR /etc/ld.so.cache .
161 .TP
162 .BI \-\-library\-path " path"
163 Use
164 .I path
165 instead of
166 .B LD_LIBRARY_PATH
167 environment variable setting (see below).
168 The names
169 .IR ORIGIN ,
170 .IR LIB ,
171 and
172 .IR PLATFORM
173 are interpreted as for the
174 .BR LD_LIBRARY_PATH
175 environment variable.
176 .TP
177 .BI \-\-inhibit\-rpath " list"
178 Ignore RPATH and RUNPATH information in object names in
179 .IR list .
180 This option is ignored when running in secure-execution mode (see below).
181 .TP
182 .BI \-\-audit " list"
183 Use objects named in
184 .I list
185 as auditors.
186 .SH ENVIRONMENT
187 Various environment variables influence the operation of the dynamic linker.
188 .\"
189 .SS Secure-execution mode
190 For security reasons,
191 the effects of some environment variables are voided or modified if
192 the dynamic linker determines that the binary should be
193 run in secure-execution mode.
194 (For details, see the discussion of individual environment variables below.)
195 A binary is executed in secure-execution mode if the
196 .B AT_SECURE
197 entry in the auxiliary vector (see
198 .BR getauxval (3))
199 has a nonzero value.
200 This entry may have a nonzero value for various reasons, including:
201 .IP * 3
202 The process's real and effective user IDs differ,
203 or the real and effective group IDs differ.
204 This typically occurs as a result of executing
205 a set-user-ID or set-group-ID program.
206 .IP *
207 A process with a non-root user ID executed a binary that
208 conferred permitted or effective capabilities.
209 .IP *
210 A nonzero value may have been set by a Linux Security Module.
211 .\"
212 .SS Environment variables
213 Among the more important environment variables are the following:
214 .TP
215 .BR LD_ASSUME_KERNEL " (since glibc 2.2.3)"
216 Each shared object can inform the dynamic linker of the minimum kernel ABI
217 version that it requires.
218 (This requirement is encoded in an ELF note section that is viewable via
219 .IR "readelf\ \-n"
220 as a section labeled
221 .BR NT_GNU_ABI_TAG .)
222 At run time,
223 the dynamic linker determines the ABI version of the running kernel and
224 will reject loading shared objects that specify minimum ABI versions
225 that exceed that ABI version.
226
227 .BR LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
228 can be used to
229 cause the dynamic linker to assume that it is running on a system with
230 a different kernel ABI version.
231 For example, the following command line causes the
232 dynamic linker to assume it is running on Linux 2.2.5 when loading
233 the shared objects required by
234 .IR myprog :
235
236 .in +4n
237 .nf
238 $ \fBLD_ASSUME_KERNEL=2.2.5 ./myprog\fP
239 .fi
240 .in
241
242 On systems that provide multiple versions of a shared object
243 (in different directories in the search path) that have
244 different minimum kernel ABI version requirements,
245 .BR LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
246 can be used to select the version of the object that is used
247 (dependent on the directory search order).
248 Historically, the most common use of the
249 .BR LD_ASSUME_KERNEL
250 feature was to manually select the older
251 LinuxThreads POSIX threads implementation on systems that provided both
252 LinuxThreads and NPTL
253 (which latter was typically the default on such systems);
254 see
255 .BR pthreads (7).
256 .TP
257 .BR LD_BIND_NOW " (since glibc 2.1.1)"
258 If set to a nonempty string,
259 causes the dynamic linker to resolve all symbols
260 at program startup instead of deferring function call resolution to the point
261 when they are first referenced.
262 This is useful when using a debugger.
263 .TP
264 .B LD_LIBRARY_PATH
265 A list of directories in which to search for
266 ELF libraries at execution-time.
267 The items in the list are separated by either colons or semicolons.
268 Similar to the
269 .B PATH
270 environment variable.
271
272 This variable is ignored in secure-execution mode.
273
274 Within the pathnames specified in
275 .BR LD_LIBRARY_PATH ,
276 the dynamic linker expands the tokens
277 .IR $ORIGIN ,
278 .IR $LIB ,
279 and
280 .IR $PLATFORM
281 (or the versions using curly braces around the names)
282 as described above in
283 .IR "Rpath token expansion" .
284 Thus, for example,
285 the following would cause a library to be searched for in either the
286 .I lib
287 or
288 .I lib64
289 subdirectory below the directory containing the program to be executed:
290
291 $ \fBLD_LIBRARY_PATH='$ORIGIN/$LIB' prog\fP
292
293 (Note the use of single quotes, which prevent expansion of
294 .I $ORIGIN
295 and
296 .I $LIB
297 as shell variables!)
298 .TP
299 .B LD_PRELOAD
300 A list of additional, user-specified, ELF shared
301 objects to be loaded before all others.
302 The items of the list can be separated by spaces or colons.
303 This can be used to selectively override functions in other shared objects.
304 The objects are searched for using the rules given under DESCRIPTION.
305
306 In secure-execution mode,
307 preload pathnames containing slashes are ignored.
308 Furthermore, shared objects are preloaded only
309 from the standard search directories and and only
310 if they have set-user-ID mode bit enabled (which is not typical).
311
312 Within the names specified in the
313 .BR LD_PRELOAD
314 list, the dynamic linker understands the tokens
315 .IR $ORIGIN ,
316 .IR $LIB ,
317 and
318 .IR $PLATFORM
319 (or the versions using curly braces around the names)
320 as described above in
321 .IR "Rpath token expansion" .
322 (See also the discussion of quoting under the description of
323 .BR LD_LIBRARY_PATH .)
324 .\" Tested with the following:
325 .\"
326 .\" LD_PRELOAD='$LIB/libmod.so' LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. ./prog
327 .\"
328 .\" which will preload the libmod.so in 'lib' or 'lib64', using it
329 .\" in preference to the version in '.'.
330 .TP
331 .BR LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS
332 If set (to any value), causes the program to list its dynamic
333 dependencies, as if run by
334 .BR ldd (1),
335 instead of running normally.
336 .LP
337 Then there are lots of more or less obscure variables,
338 many obsolete or only for internal use.
339 .TP
340 .BR LD_AUDIT " (since glibc 2.4)"
341 A colon-separated list of user-specified, ELF shared objects
342 to be loaded before all others in a separate linker namespace
343 (i.e., one that does not intrude upon the normal symbol bindings that
344 would occur in the process).
345 These objects can be used to audit the operation of the dynamic linker.
346
347 .B LD_AUDIT
348 is ignored in secure-execution mode.
349
350 The dynamic linker will notify the audit
351 shared objects at so-called auditing checkpoints\(emfor example,
352 loading a new shared object, resolving a symbol,
353 or calling a symbol from another shared object\(emby
354 calling an appropriate function within the audit shared object.
355 For details, see
356 .BR rtld-audit (7).
357 The auditing interface is largely compatible with that provided on Solaris,
358 as described in its
359 .IR "Linker and Libraries Guide" ,
360 in the chapter
361 .IR "Runtime Linker Auditing Interface" .
362
363 Within the names specified in the
364 .BR LD_AUDIT
365 list, the dynamic linker understands the tokens
366 .IR $ORIGIN ,
367 .IR $LIB ,
368 and
369 .IR $PLATFORM
370 (or the versions using curly braces around the names)
371 as described above in
372 .IR "Rpath token expansion" .
373 (See also the discussion of quoting under the description of
374 .BR LD_LIBRARY_PATH .)
375
376 Since glibc 2.13,
377 .\" commit 8e9f92e9d5d7737afdacf79b76d98c4c42980508
378 in secure-execution mode,
379 names in the audit list that contain slashes are ignored,
380 and only shared objects in the standard search directories that
381 have the set-user-ID mode bit enabled are loaded.
382 .TP
383 .BR LD_BIND_NOT " (since glibc 2.1.95)"
384 If this environment variable is set to a nonempty string,
385 do not update the GOT (global offset table) and PLT (procedure linkage table)
386 after resolving a function symbol.
387 By combining the use of this variable with
388 .BR LD_DEBUG
389 (with the categories
390 .IR bindings
391 and
392 .IR symbols ),
393 one can observe all run-time function bindings.
394 .TP
395 .BR LD_DEBUG " (since glibc 2.1)"
396 Output verbose debugging information about the dynamic linker.
397 If set to
398 .BR all ,
399 print all debugging information,
400 Setting this variable to
401 .BR help
402 does not run the specified program,
403 and displays a help message about which categories can be specified in this
404 environment variable.
405 The categories are:
406 .RS
407 .TP 12
408 .I bindings
409 Display information about which definition each symbol is bound to.
410 .TP
411 .I files
412 Display progress for input file.
413 .TP
414 .I libs
415 Display library search paths.
416 .TP
417 .I reloc
418 Display relocation processing.
419 .TP
420 .I scopes
421 Display scope information.
422 .TP
423 .I statistics
424 Display relocation statistics.
425 .TP
426 .I symbols
427 Display search paths for each symbol look-up.
428 .TP
429 .I unused
430 Determine unused DSOs.
431 .TP
432 .I versions
433 Display version dependencies.
434 .RE
435 .IP
436 The value in
437 .BR LD_DEBUG
438 can specify multiple categories, separated by colons, commas,
439 or (if the value is quoted) spaces.
440
441 Since glibc 2.3.4,
442 .B LD_DEBUG
443 is ignored in secure-execution mode, unless the file
444 .IR /etc/suid\-debug
445 exists (the content of the file is irrelevant).
446 .TP
447 .BR LD_DEBUG_OUTPUT " (since glibc 2.1)"
448 File in which
449 .B LD_DEBUG
450 output should be written.
451 The default is standard error.
452
453 .B LD_DEBUG_OUTPUT
454 is ignored in secure-execution mode.
455 .TP
456 .BR LD_DYNAMIC_WEAK " (since glibc 2.1.91)"
457 If this environment variable is defined (with any value),
458 allow weak symbols to be overridden (reverting to old glibc behavior).
459 .\" See weak handling
460 .\" https://www.sourceware.org/ml/libc-hacker/2000-06/msg00029.html
461 .\" To: GNU libc hacker <libc-hacker at sourceware dot cygnus dot com>
462 .\" Subject: weak handling
463 .\" From: Ulrich Drepper <drepper at redhat dot com>
464 .\" Date: 07 Jun 2000 20:08:12 -0700
465 .\" Reply-To: drepper at cygnus dot com (Ulrich Drepper)
466
467 Since glibc 2.3.4,
468 .B LD_DYNAMIC_WEAK
469 is ignored in secure-execution mode.
470 .TP
471 .BR LD_HWCAP_MASK " (since glibc 2.1)"
472 Mask for hardware capabilities.
473 .TP
474 .BR LD_ORIGIN_PATH " (since glibc 2.1)"
475 Path where the binary is found.
476 .\" Used only if $ORIGIN can't be determined by normal means
477 .\" (from the origin path saved at load time, or from /proc/self/exe)?
478
479 Since glibc 2.4,
480 .B LD_ORIGIN_PATH
481 is ignored in secure-execution mode.
482 .TP
483 .BR LD_POINTER_GUARD " (glibc from 2.4 to 2.22)"
484 Set to 0 to disable pointer guarding.
485 Any other value enables pointer guarding, which is also the default.
486 Pointer guarding is a security mechanism whereby some pointers to code
487 stored in writable program memory (return addresses saved by
488 .BR setjmp (3)
489 or function pointers used by various glibc internals) are mangled
490 semi-randomly to make it more difficult for an attacker to hijack
491 the pointers for use in the event of a buffer overrun or
492 stack-smashing attack.
493 Since glibc 2.23,
494 .\" commit a014cecd82b71b70a6a843e250e06b541ad524f7
495 .B LD_POINTER_GUARD
496 can no longer be used to disable pointer guarding,
497 which is now always enabled.
498 .TP
499 .BR LD_PROFILE " (since glibc 2.1)"
500 The name of a (single) shared object to be profiled,
501 specified either as a pathname or a soname.
502 Profiling output is appended to the file whose name is:
503 "\fI$LD_PROFILE_OUTPUT\fP/\fI$LD_PROFILE\fP.profile".
504
505 Since glibc 2.2.5,
506 .BR LD_PROFILE
507 is ignored in secure execution mode.
508 .TP
509 .BR LD_PROFILE_OUTPUT " (since glibc 2.1)"
510 Directory where
511 .B LD_PROFILE
512 output should be written.
513 If this variable is not defined, or is defined as an empty string,
514 then the default is
515 .IR /var/tmp .
516
517 .B LD_PROFILE_OUTPUT
518 is ignored in secure-execution mode; instead
519 .IR /var/profile
520 is always used.
521 (This detail is relevant only before glibc 2.2.5,
522 since in later glibc versions,
523 .B LD_PROFILE
524 is also ignored in secure-execution mode.)
525 .TP
526 .BR LD_SHOW_AUXV " (since glibc 2.1)"
527 If this environment variable is defined (with any value),
528 show the auxiliary array passed up from the kernel (see also
529 .BR getauxval (3)).
530
531 Since glibc 2.3.4,
532 .B LD_SHOW_AUXV
533 is ignored in secure-execution mode.
534 .TP
535 .BR LD_TRACE_PRELINKING " (since glibc 2.4)"
536 If this environment variable is defined,
537 trace prelinking of the object whose name is assigned to
538 this environment variable.
539 (Use
540 .BR ldd (1)
541 to get a list of the objects that might be traced.)
542 If the object name is not recognized,
543 .\" (This is what seems to happen, from experimenting)
544 then all prelinking activity is traced.
545 .TP
546 .BR LD_USE_LOAD_BIAS " (since glibc 2.3.3)"
547 .\" http://sources.redhat.com/ml/libc-hacker/2003-11/msg00127.html
548 .\" Subject: [PATCH] Support LD_USE_LOAD_BIAS
549 .\" Jakub Jelinek
550 By default (i.e., if this variable is not defined),
551 executables and prelinked
552 shared objects will honor base addresses of their dependent shared objects
553 and (nonprelinked) position-independent executables (PIEs)
554 and other shared objects will not honor them.
555 If
556 .B LD_USE_LOAD_BIAS
557 is defined with the value 1, both executables and PIEs
558 will honor the base addresses.
559 If
560 .B LD_USE_LOAD_BIAS
561 is defined with the value 0,
562 neither executables nor PIEs will honor the base addresses.
563
564 This variable is ignored in secure-execution mode.
565 .TP
566 .BR LD_VERBOSE " (since glibc 2.1)"
567 If set to a nonempty string,
568 output symbol versioning information about the
569 program if the
570 .B LD_TRACE_LOADED_OBJECTS
571 environment variable has been set.
572 .TP
573 .BR LD_WARN " (since glibc 2.1.3)
574 If set to a nonempty string, warn about unresolved symbols.
575 .TP
576 .BR LD_PREFER_MAP_32BIT_EXEC " (x86-64 only; since glibc 2.23)"
577 According to the Intel Silvermont software optimization guide, for 64-bit
578 applications, branch prediction performance can be negatively impacted
579 when the target of a branch is more than 4GB away from the branch.
580 If this environment variable is set (to any value),
581 .BR ld.so
582 will first try to map executable pages using the
583 .BR mmap (2)
584 .BR MAP_32BIT
585 flag, and fall back to mapping without that flag if that attempt fails.
586 NB: MAP_32BIT will map to the low 2GB (not 4GB) of the address space.
587
588 Because
589 .B MAP_32BIT
590 reduces the address range available for address space layout
591 randomization (ASLR),
592 .B LD_PREFER_MAP_32BIT_EXEC
593 is always disabled in secure-execution mode.
594 .SH FILES
595 .PD 0
596 .TP
597 .I /lib/ld.so
598 a.out dynamic linker/loader
599 .TP
600 .IR /lib/ld\-linux.so. { 1 , 2 }
601 ELF dynamic linker/loader
602 .TP
603 .I /etc/ld.so.cache
604 File containing a compiled list of directories in which to search for
605 shared objects and an ordered list of candidate shared objects.
606 See
607 .BR ldconfig (8).
608 .TP
609 .I /etc/ld.so.preload
610 File containing a whitespace-separated list of ELF shared objects to
611 be loaded before the program.
612 See the discussion of
613 .BR LD_PRELOAD
614 above.
615 If both
616 .BR LD_PRELOAD
617 and
618 .I /etc/ld.so.preload
619 are employed, the libraries specified by
620 .BR LD_PRELOAD
621 are preloaded first.
622 .I /etc/ld.so.preload
623 has a system-wide effect,
624 causing the specified libraries to be preloaded for
625 all programs that are executed on the system.
626 (This is usually undesirable,
627 and is typically employed only as an emergency remedy, for example,
628 as a temporary workaround to a library misconfiguration issue.)
629 .TP
630 .B lib*.so*
631 shared objects
632 .PD
633 .SH NOTES
634 .SS Hardware capabilities
635 Some shared objects are compiled using hardware-specific instructions which do
636 not exist on every CPU.
637 Such objects should be installed in directories whose names define the
638 required hardware capabilities, such as
639 .IR /usr/lib/sse2/ .
640 The dynamic linker checks these directories against the hardware of the
641 machine and selects the most suitable version of a given shared object.
642 Hardware capability directories can be cascaded to combine CPU features.
643 The list of supported hardware capability names depends on the CPU.
644 The following names are currently recognized:
645 .TP
646 .B Alpha
647 ev4, ev5, ev56, ev6, ev67
648 .TP
649 .B MIPS
650 loongson2e, loongson2f, octeon, octeon2
651 .TP
652 .B PowerPC
653 4xxmac, altivec, arch_2_05, arch_2_06, booke, cellbe, dfp, efpdouble, efpsingle,
654 fpu, ic_snoop, mmu, notb, pa6t, power4, power5, power5+, power6x, ppc32, ppc601,
655 ppc64, smt, spe, ucache, vsx
656 .TP
657 .B SPARC
658 flush, muldiv, stbar, swap, ultra3, v9, v9v, v9v2
659 .TP
660 .B s390
661 dfp, eimm, esan3, etf3enh, g5, highgprs, hpage, ldisp, msa, stfle,
662 z900, z990, z9-109, z10, zarch
663 .TP
664 .B x86 (32-bit only)
665 acpi, apic, clflush, cmov, cx8, dts, fxsr, ht, i386, i486, i586, i686, mca, mmx,
666 mtrr, pat, pbe, pge, pn, pse36, sep, ss, sse, sse2, tm
667 .SH SEE ALSO
668 .BR ld (1),
669 .BR ldd (1),
670 .BR pldd (1),
671 .BR sprof (1),
672 .BR dlopen (3),
673 .BR getauxval (3),
674 .BR elf (5),
675 .BR capabilities (7),
676 .BR rtld-audit (7),
677 .BR ldconfig (8),
678 .BR sln (8)
679 .\" .SH AUTHORS
680 .\" ld.so: David Engel, Eric Youngdale, Peter MacDonald, Hongjiu Lu, Linus
681 .\" Torvalds, Lars Wirzenius and Mitch D'Souza
682 .\" ld-linux.so: Roland McGrath, Ulrich Drepper and others.
683 .\"
684 .\" In the above, (libc5) stands for David Engel's ld.so/ld-linux.so.