//! Support for "weak linkage" to symbols on Unix //! //! Some I/O operations we do in libstd require newer versions of OSes but we //! need to maintain binary compatibility with older releases for now. In order //! to use the new functionality when available we use this module for //! detection. //! //! One option to use here is weak linkage, but that is unfortunately only //! really workable on Linux. Hence, use dlsym to get the symbol value at //! runtime. This is also done for compatibility with older versions of glibc, //! and to avoid creating dependencies on GLIBC_PRIVATE symbols. It assumes that //! we've been dynamically linked to the library the symbol comes from, but that //! is currently always the case for things like libpthread/libc. //! //! A long time ago this used weak linkage for the __pthread_get_minstack //! symbol, but that caused Debian to detect an unnecessarily strict versioned //! dependency on libc6 (#23628). // There are a variety of `#[cfg]`s controlling which targets are involved in // each instance of `weak!` and `syscall!`. Rather than trying to unify all of // that, we'll just allow that some unix targets don't use this module at all. #![allow(dead_code, unused_macros)] use crate::ffi::CStr; use crate::marker; use crate::mem; use crate::sync::atomic::{self, AtomicUsize, Ordering}; macro_rules! weak { (fn $name:ident($($t:ty),*) -> $ret:ty) => ( static $name: crate::sys::weak::Weak $ret> = crate::sys::weak::Weak::new(concat!(stringify!($name), '\0')); ) } pub struct Weak { name: &'static str, addr: AtomicUsize, _marker: marker::PhantomData, } impl Weak { pub const fn new(name: &'static str) -> Weak { Weak { name, addr: AtomicUsize::new(1), _marker: marker::PhantomData } } pub fn get(&self) -> Option { assert_eq!(mem::size_of::(), mem::size_of::()); unsafe { // Relaxed is fine here because we fence before reading through the // pointer (see the comment below). match self.addr.load(Ordering::Relaxed) { 1 => self.initialize(), 0 => None, addr => { let func = mem::transmute_copy::(&addr); // The caller is presumably going to read through this value // (by calling the function we've dlsymed). This means we'd // need to have loaded it with at least C11's consume // ordering in order to be guaranteed that the data we read // from the pointer isn't from before the pointer was // stored. Rust has no equivalent to memory_order_consume, // so we use an acquire fence (sorry, ARM). // // Now, in practice this likely isn't needed even on CPUs // where relaxed and consume mean different things. The // symbols we're loading are probably present (or not) at // init, and even if they aren't the runtime dynamic loader // is extremely likely have sufficient barriers internally // (possibly implicitly, for example the ones provided by // invoking `mprotect`). // // That said, none of that's *guaranteed*, and so we fence. atomic::fence(Ordering::Acquire); Some(func) } } } } // Cold because it should only happen during first-time initalization. #[cold] unsafe fn initialize(&self) -> Option { let val = fetch(self.name); // This synchronizes with the acquire fence in `get`. self.addr.store(val, Ordering::Release); match val { 0 => None, addr => Some(mem::transmute_copy::(&addr)), } } } unsafe fn fetch(name: &str) -> usize { let name = match CStr::from_bytes_with_nul(name.as_bytes()) { Ok(cstr) => cstr, Err(..) => return 0, }; libc::dlsym(libc::RTLD_DEFAULT, name.as_ptr()) as usize } #[cfg(not(any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android")))] macro_rules! syscall { (fn $name:ident($($arg_name:ident: $t:ty),*) -> $ret:ty) => ( unsafe fn $name($($arg_name: $t),*) -> $ret { use super::os; weak! { fn $name($($t),*) -> $ret } if let Some(fun) = $name.get() { fun($($arg_name),*) } else { os::set_errno(libc::ENOSYS); -1 } } ) } #[cfg(any(target_os = "linux", target_os = "android"))] macro_rules! syscall { (fn $name:ident($($arg_name:ident: $t:ty),*) -> $ret:ty) => ( unsafe fn $name($($arg_name:$t),*) -> $ret { // This looks like a hack, but concat_idents only accepts idents // (not paths). use libc::*; weak! { fn $name($($t),*) -> $ret } // Use a weak symbol from libc when possible, allowing `LD_PRELOAD` // interposition, but if it's not found just use a raw syscall. if let Some(fun) = $name.get() { fun($($arg_name),*) } else { syscall( concat_idents!(SYS_, $name), $($arg_name),* ) as $ret } } ) }