building a .so that is also an executable
Solution 1:
Update 2: see Andrew G Morgan's slightly more complicated solution which does work for any GLIBC (that solution is also used in libc.so.6
itself (since forever), which is why you can run it as ./libc.so.6
(it prints version info when invoked that way)).
Update 1: this no longer works with newer GLIBC versions:
./a.out: error while loading shared libraries: ./pie.so: cannot dynamically load position-independent executable
Original answer from 2009:
Building your shared library with -pie
option appears to give you everything you want:
/* pie.c */
#include <stdio.h>
int foo()
{
printf("in %s %s:%d\n", __func__, __FILE__, __LINE__);
return 42;
}
int main()
{
printf("in %s %s:%d\n", __func__, __FILE__, __LINE__);
return foo();
}
/* main.c */
#include <stdio.h>
extern int foo(void);
int main()
{
printf("in %s %s:%d\n", __func__, __FILE__, __LINE__);
return foo();
}
$ gcc -fPIC -pie -o pie.so pie.c -Wl,-E
$ gcc main.c ./pie.so
$ ./pie.so
in main pie.c:9
in foo pie.c:4
$ ./a.out
in main main.c:6
in foo pie.c:4
$
P.S. glibc implements write(3)
via system call because it doesn't have anywhere else to call (it is the lowest level already). This has nothing to do with being able to execute libc.so.6
.
Solution 2:
I have been looking to add support for this to pam_cap.so
, and found this question. As @EmployedRussian notes in a follow-up to their own post, the accepted answer stopped working at some point. It took a while to figure out how to make this work again, so here is a worked example.
This worked example involves 5 files to show how things work with some corresponding tests.
First, consider this trivial program (call it empty.c
):
int main(int argc, char **argv) { return 0; }
Compiling it, we can see how it resolves the dynamic symbols on my system as follows:
$ gcc -o empty empty.c
$ objcopy --dump-section .interp=/dev/stdout empty ; echo
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
$ DL_LOADER=/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
That last line sets a shell variable for use later.
Here are the two files that build my example shared library:
/* multi.h */
void multi_main(void);
void multi(const char *caller);
and
/* multi.c */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "multi.h"
void multi(const char *caller) {
printf("called from %s\n", caller);
}
__attribute__((force_align_arg_pointer))
void multi_main(void) {
multi(__FILE__);
exit(42);
}
const char dl_loader[] __attribute__((section(".interp"))) =
DL_LOADER ;
(Update 2021-11-13: The forced alignment is to help __i386__
code be SSE compatible - without it we get hard to debug glibc
SIGSEGV
crashes.)
We can compile and run it as follows:
$ gcc -fPIC -shared -o multi.so -DDL_LOADER="\"${DL_LOADER}\"" multi.c -Wl,-e,multi_main
$ ./multi.so
called from multi.c
$ echo $?
42
So, this is a .so
that can be executed as a stand alone binary. Next, we validate that it can be loaded as shared object.
/* opener.c */
#include <dlfcn.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
void *handle = dlopen("./multi.so", RTLD_NOW);
if (handle == NULL) {
perror("no multi.so load");
exit(1);
}
void (*multi)(const char *) = dlsym(handle, "multi");
multi(__FILE__);
}
That is we dynamically load the shared-object and run a function from it:
$ gcc -o opener opener.c -ldl
$ ./opener
called from opener.c
Finally, we link against this shared object:
/* main.c */
#include "multi.h"
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
multi(__FILE__);
}
Where we compile and run it as follows:
$ gcc main.c -o main multi.so
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./ ./main
called from main.c
(Note, because multi.so
isn't in a standard system library location, we need to override where the runtime looks for the shared object file with the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable.)