| /* |
| * Copyright (c) 1999-2010 Apple Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
| * |
| * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@ |
| * |
| * This file contains Original Code and/or Modifications of Original Code |
| * as defined in and that are subject to the Apple Public Source License |
| * Version 2.0 (the 'License'). You may not use this file except in |
| * compliance with the License. Please obtain a copy of the License at |
| * http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/ and read it before using this |
| * file. |
| * |
| * The Original Code and all software distributed under the License are |
| * distributed on an 'AS IS' basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER |
| * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES, |
| * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, |
| * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. |
| * Please see the License for the specific language governing rights and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| * |
| * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_END@ |
| */ |
| #ifndef _MACHO_LOADER_H_ |
| #define _MACHO_LOADER_H_ |
| |
| /* |
| * This file describes the format of mach object files. |
| */ |
| #include <stdint.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * <mach/machine.h> is needed here for the cpu_type_t and cpu_subtype_t types |
| * and contains the constants for the possible values of these types. |
| */ |
| #include <mach/machine.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * <mach/vm_prot.h> is needed here for the vm_prot_t type and contains the |
| * constants that are or'ed together for the possible values of this type. |
| */ |
| #include <mach/vm_prot.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * <machine/thread_status.h> is expected to define the flavors of the thread |
| * states and the structures of those flavors for each machine. |
| */ |
| #include <mach/machine/thread_status.h> |
| #include <architecture/byte_order.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * The 32-bit mach header appears at the very beginning of the object file for |
| * 32-bit architectures. |
| */ |
| struct mach_header { |
| uint32_t magic; /* mach magic number identifier */ |
| cpu_type_t cputype; /* cpu specifier */ |
| cpu_subtype_t cpusubtype; /* machine specifier */ |
| uint32_t filetype; /* type of file */ |
| uint32_t ncmds; /* number of load commands */ |
| uint32_t sizeofcmds; /* the size of all the load commands */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* Constant for the magic field of the mach_header (32-bit architectures) */ |
| #define MH_MAGIC 0xfeedface /* the mach magic number */ |
| #define MH_CIGAM 0xcefaedfe /* NXSwapInt(MH_MAGIC) */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The 64-bit mach header appears at the very beginning of object files for |
| * 64-bit architectures. |
| */ |
| struct mach_header_64 { |
| uint32_t magic; /* mach magic number identifier */ |
| cpu_type_t cputype; /* cpu specifier */ |
| cpu_subtype_t cpusubtype; /* machine specifier */ |
| uint32_t filetype; /* type of file */ |
| uint32_t ncmds; /* number of load commands */ |
| uint32_t sizeofcmds; /* the size of all the load commands */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags */ |
| uint32_t reserved; /* reserved */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* Constant for the magic field of the mach_header_64 (64-bit architectures) */ |
| #define MH_MAGIC_64 0xfeedfacf /* the 64-bit mach magic number */ |
| #define MH_CIGAM_64 0xcffaedfe /* NXSwapInt(MH_MAGIC_64) */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The layout of the file depends on the filetype. For all but the MH_OBJECT |
| * file type the segments are padded out and aligned on a segment alignment |
| * boundary for efficient demand pageing. The MH_EXECUTE, MH_FVMLIB, MH_DYLIB, |
| * MH_DYLINKER and MH_BUNDLE file types also have the headers included as part |
| * of their first segment. |
| * |
| * The file type MH_OBJECT is a compact format intended as output of the |
| * assembler and input (and possibly output) of the link editor (the .o |
| * format). All sections are in one unnamed segment with no segment padding. |
| * This format is used as an executable format when the file is so small the |
| * segment padding greatly increases its size. |
| * |
| * The file type MH_PRELOAD is an executable format intended for things that |
| * are not executed under the kernel (proms, stand alones, kernels, etc). The |
| * format can be executed under the kernel but may demand paged it and not |
| * preload it before execution. |
| * |
| * A core file is in MH_CORE format and can be any in an arbritray legal |
| * Mach-O file. |
| * |
| * Constants for the filetype field of the mach_header |
| */ |
| #define MH_OBJECT 0x1 /* relocatable object file */ |
| #define MH_EXECUTE 0x2 /* demand paged executable file */ |
| #define MH_FVMLIB 0x3 /* fixed VM shared library file */ |
| #define MH_CORE 0x4 /* core file */ |
| #define MH_PRELOAD 0x5 /* preloaded executable file */ |
| #define MH_DYLIB 0x6 /* dynamically bound shared library */ |
| #define MH_DYLINKER 0x7 /* dynamic link editor */ |
| #define MH_BUNDLE 0x8 /* dynamically bound bundle file */ |
| #define MH_DYLIB_STUB 0x9 /* shared library stub for static */ |
| /* linking only, no section contents */ |
| #define MH_DSYM 0xa /* companion file with only debug */ |
| /* sections */ |
| #define MH_KEXT_BUNDLE 0xb /* x86_64 kexts */ |
| |
| /* Constants for the flags field of the mach_header */ |
| #define MH_NOUNDEFS 0x1 /* the object file has no undefined |
| references */ |
| #define MH_INCRLINK 0x2 /* the object file is the output of an |
| incremental link against a base file |
| and can't be link edited again */ |
| #define MH_DYLDLINK 0x4 /* the object file is input for the |
| dynamic linker and can't be staticly |
| link edited again */ |
| #define MH_BINDATLOAD 0x8 /* the object file's undefined |
| references are bound by the dynamic |
| linker when loaded. */ |
| #define MH_PREBOUND 0x10 /* the file has its dynamic undefined |
| references prebound. */ |
| #define MH_SPLIT_SEGS 0x20 /* the file has its read-only and |
| read-write segments split */ |
| #define MH_LAZY_INIT 0x40 /* the shared library init routine is |
| to be run lazily via catching memory |
| faults to its writeable segments |
| (obsolete) */ |
| #define MH_TWOLEVEL 0x80 /* the image is using two-level name |
| space bindings */ |
| #define MH_FORCE_FLAT 0x100 /* the executable is forcing all images |
| to use flat name space bindings */ |
| #define MH_NOMULTIDEFS 0x200 /* this umbrella guarantees no multiple |
| defintions of symbols in its |
| sub-images so the two-level namespace |
| hints can always be used. */ |
| #define MH_NOFIXPREBINDING 0x400 /* do not have dyld notify the |
| prebinding agent about this |
| executable */ |
| #define MH_PREBINDABLE 0x800 /* the binary is not prebound but can |
| have its prebinding redone. only used |
| when MH_PREBOUND is not set. */ |
| #define MH_ALLMODSBOUND 0x1000 /* indicates that this binary binds to |
| all two-level namespace modules of |
| its dependent libraries. only used |
| when MH_PREBINDABLE and MH_TWOLEVEL |
| are both set. */ |
| #define MH_SUBSECTIONS_VIA_SYMBOLS 0x2000/* safe to divide up the sections into |
| sub-sections via symbols for dead |
| code stripping */ |
| #define MH_CANONICAL 0x4000 /* the binary has been canonicalized |
| via the unprebind operation */ |
| #define MH_WEAK_DEFINES 0x8000 /* the final linked image contains |
| external weak symbols */ |
| #define MH_BINDS_TO_WEAK 0x10000 /* the final linked image uses |
| weak symbols */ |
| |
| #define MH_ALLOW_STACK_EXECUTION 0x20000/* When this bit is set, all stacks |
| in the task will be given stack |
| execution privilege. Only used in |
| MH_EXECUTE filetypes. */ |
| #define MH_ROOT_SAFE 0x40000 /* When this bit is set, the binary |
| declares it is safe for use in |
| processes with uid zero */ |
| |
| #define MH_SETUID_SAFE 0x80000 /* When this bit is set, the binary |
| declares it is safe for use in |
| processes when issetugid() is true */ |
| |
| #define MH_NO_REEXPORTED_DYLIBS 0x100000 /* When this bit is set on a dylib, |
| the static linker does not need to |
| examine dependent dylibs to see |
| if any are re-exported */ |
| #define MH_PIE 0x200000 /* When this bit is set, the OS will |
| load the main executable at a |
| random address. Only used in |
| MH_EXECUTE filetypes. */ |
| #define MH_DEAD_STRIPPABLE_DYLIB 0x400000 /* Only for use on dylibs. When |
| linking against a dylib that |
| has this bit set, the static linker |
| will automatically not create a |
| LC_LOAD_DYLIB load command to the |
| dylib if no symbols are being |
| referenced from the dylib. */ |
| #define MH_HAS_TLV_DESCRIPTORS 0x800000 /* Contains a section of type |
| S_THREAD_LOCAL_VARIABLES */ |
| |
| #define MH_NO_HEAP_EXECUTION 0x1000000 /* When this bit is set, the OS will |
| run the main executable with |
| a non-executable heap even on |
| platforms (e.g. i386) that don't |
| require it. Only used in MH_EXECUTE |
| filetypes. */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The load commands directly follow the mach_header. The total size of all |
| * of the commands is given by the sizeofcmds field in the mach_header. All |
| * load commands must have as their first two fields cmd and cmdsize. The cmd |
| * field is filled in with a constant for that command type. Each command type |
| * has a structure specifically for it. The cmdsize field is the size in bytes |
| * of the particular load command structure plus anything that follows it that |
| * is a part of the load command (i.e. section structures, strings, etc.). To |
| * advance to the next load command the cmdsize can be added to the offset or |
| * pointer of the current load command. The cmdsize for 32-bit architectures |
| * MUST be a multiple of 4 bytes and for 64-bit architectures MUST be a multiple |
| * of 8 bytes (these are forever the maximum alignment of any load commands). |
| * The padded bytes must be zero. All tables in the object file must also |
| * follow these rules so the file can be memory mapped. Otherwise the pointers |
| * to these tables will not work well or at all on some machines. With all |
| * padding zeroed like objects will compare byte for byte. |
| */ |
| struct load_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* type of load command */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* total size of command in bytes */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * After MacOS X 10.1 when a new load command is added that is required to be |
| * understood by the dynamic linker for the image to execute properly the |
| * LC_REQ_DYLD bit will be or'ed into the load command constant. If the dynamic |
| * linker sees such a load command it it does not understand will issue a |
| * "unknown load command required for execution" error and refuse to use the |
| * image. Other load commands without this bit that are not understood will |
| * simply be ignored. |
| */ |
| #define LC_REQ_DYLD 0x80000000 |
| |
| /* Constants for the cmd field of all load commands, the type */ |
| #define LC_SEGMENT 0x1 /* segment of this file to be mapped */ |
| #define LC_SYMTAB 0x2 /* link-edit stab symbol table info */ |
| #define LC_SYMSEG 0x3 /* link-edit gdb symbol table info (obsolete) */ |
| #define LC_THREAD 0x4 /* thread */ |
| #define LC_UNIXTHREAD 0x5 /* unix thread (includes a stack) */ |
| #define LC_LOADFVMLIB 0x6 /* load a specified fixed VM shared library */ |
| #define LC_IDFVMLIB 0x7 /* fixed VM shared library identification */ |
| #define LC_IDENT 0x8 /* object identification info (obsolete) */ |
| #define LC_FVMFILE 0x9 /* fixed VM file inclusion (internal use) */ |
| #define LC_PREPAGE 0xa /* prepage command (internal use) */ |
| #define LC_DYSYMTAB 0xb /* dynamic link-edit symbol table info */ |
| #define LC_LOAD_DYLIB 0xc /* load a dynamically linked shared library */ |
| #define LC_ID_DYLIB 0xd /* dynamically linked shared lib ident */ |
| #define LC_LOAD_DYLINKER 0xe /* load a dynamic linker */ |
| #define LC_ID_DYLINKER 0xf /* dynamic linker identification */ |
| #define LC_PREBOUND_DYLIB 0x10 /* modules prebound for a dynamically */ |
| /* linked shared library */ |
| #define LC_ROUTINES 0x11 /* image routines */ |
| #define LC_SUB_FRAMEWORK 0x12 /* sub framework */ |
| #define LC_SUB_UMBRELLA 0x13 /* sub umbrella */ |
| #define LC_SUB_CLIENT 0x14 /* sub client */ |
| #define LC_SUB_LIBRARY 0x15 /* sub library */ |
| #define LC_TWOLEVEL_HINTS 0x16 /* two-level namespace lookup hints */ |
| #define LC_PREBIND_CKSUM 0x17 /* prebind checksum */ |
| |
| /* |
| * load a dynamically linked shared library that is allowed to be missing |
| * (all symbols are weak imported). |
| */ |
| #define LC_LOAD_WEAK_DYLIB (0x18 | LC_REQ_DYLD) |
| |
| #define LC_SEGMENT_64 0x19 /* 64-bit segment of this file to be |
| mapped */ |
| #define LC_ROUTINES_64 0x1a /* 64-bit image routines */ |
| #define LC_UUID 0x1b /* the uuid */ |
| #define LC_RPATH (0x1c | LC_REQ_DYLD) /* runpath additions */ |
| #define LC_CODE_SIGNATURE 0x1d /* local of code signature */ |
| #define LC_SEGMENT_SPLIT_INFO 0x1e /* local of info to split segments */ |
| #define LC_REEXPORT_DYLIB (0x1f | LC_REQ_DYLD) /* load and re-export dylib */ |
| #define LC_LAZY_LOAD_DYLIB 0x20 /* delay load of dylib until first use */ |
| #define LC_ENCRYPTION_INFO 0x21 /* encrypted segment information */ |
| #define LC_DYLD_INFO 0x22 /* compressed dyld information */ |
| #define LC_DYLD_INFO_ONLY (0x22|LC_REQ_DYLD) /* compressed dyld information only */ |
| #define LC_LOAD_UPWARD_DYLIB (0x23 | LC_REQ_DYLD) /* load upward dylib */ |
| #define LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX 0x24 /* build for MacOSX min OS version */ |
| #define LC_VERSION_MIN_IPHONEOS 0x25 /* build for iPhoneOS min OS version */ |
| #define LC_FUNCTION_STARTS 0x26 /* compressed table of function start addresses */ |
| #define LC_DYLD_ENVIRONMENT 0x27 /* string for dyld to treat |
| like environment variable */ |
| |
| /* |
| * A variable length string in a load command is represented by an lc_str |
| * union. The strings are stored just after the load command structure and |
| * the offset is from the start of the load command structure. The size |
| * of the string is reflected in the cmdsize field of the load command. |
| * Once again any padded bytes to bring the cmdsize field to a multiple |
| * of 4 bytes must be zero. |
| */ |
| union lc_str { |
| uint32_t offset; /* offset to the string */ |
| #ifndef __LP64__ |
| char *ptr; /* pointer to the string */ |
| #endif |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The segment load command indicates that a part of this file is to be |
| * mapped into the task's address space. The size of this segment in memory, |
| * vmsize, maybe equal to or larger than the amount to map from this file, |
| * filesize. The file is mapped starting at fileoff to the beginning of |
| * the segment in memory, vmaddr. The rest of the memory of the segment, |
| * if any, is allocated zero fill on demand. The segment's maximum virtual |
| * memory protection and initial virtual memory protection are specified |
| * by the maxprot and initprot fields. If the segment has sections then the |
| * section structures directly follow the segment command and their size is |
| * reflected in cmdsize. |
| */ |
| struct segment_command { /* for 32-bit architectures */ |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SEGMENT */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes sizeof section structs */ |
| char segname[16]; /* segment name */ |
| uint32_t vmaddr; /* memory address of this segment */ |
| uint32_t vmsize; /* memory size of this segment */ |
| uint32_t fileoff; /* file offset of this segment */ |
| uint32_t filesize; /* amount to map from the file */ |
| vm_prot_t maxprot; /* maximum VM protection */ |
| vm_prot_t initprot; /* initial VM protection */ |
| uint32_t nsects; /* number of sections in segment */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The 64-bit segment load command indicates that a part of this file is to be |
| * mapped into a 64-bit task's address space. If the 64-bit segment has |
| * sections then section_64 structures directly follow the 64-bit segment |
| * command and their size is reflected in cmdsize. |
| */ |
| struct segment_command_64 { /* for 64-bit architectures */ |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SEGMENT_64 */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes sizeof section_64 structs */ |
| char segname[16]; /* segment name */ |
| uint64_t vmaddr; /* memory address of this segment */ |
| uint64_t vmsize; /* memory size of this segment */ |
| uint64_t fileoff; /* file offset of this segment */ |
| uint64_t filesize; /* amount to map from the file */ |
| vm_prot_t maxprot; /* maximum VM protection */ |
| vm_prot_t initprot; /* initial VM protection */ |
| uint32_t nsects; /* number of sections in segment */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* Constants for the flags field of the segment_command */ |
| #define SG_HIGHVM 0x1 /* the file contents for this segment is for |
| the high part of the VM space, the low part |
| is zero filled (for stacks in core files) */ |
| #define SG_FVMLIB 0x2 /* this segment is the VM that is allocated by |
| a fixed VM library, for overlap checking in |
| the link editor */ |
| #define SG_NORELOC 0x4 /* this segment has nothing that was relocated |
| in it and nothing relocated to it, that is |
| it maybe safely replaced without relocation*/ |
| #define SG_PROTECTED_VERSION_1 0x8 /* This segment is protected. If the |
| segment starts at file offset 0, the |
| first page of the segment is not |
| protected. All other pages of the |
| segment are protected. */ |
| |
| /* |
| * A segment is made up of zero or more sections. Non-MH_OBJECT files have |
| * all of their segments with the proper sections in each, and padded to the |
| * specified segment alignment when produced by the link editor. The first |
| * segment of a MH_EXECUTE and MH_FVMLIB format file contains the mach_header |
| * and load commands of the object file before its first section. The zero |
| * fill sections are always last in their segment (in all formats). This |
| * allows the zeroed segment padding to be mapped into memory where zero fill |
| * sections might be. The gigabyte zero fill sections, those with the section |
| * type S_GB_ZEROFILL, can only be in a segment with sections of this type. |
| * These segments are then placed after all other segments. |
| * |
| * The MH_OBJECT format has all of its sections in one segment for |
| * compactness. There is no padding to a specified segment boundary and the |
| * mach_header and load commands are not part of the segment. |
| * |
| * Sections with the same section name, sectname, going into the same segment, |
| * segname, are combined by the link editor. The resulting section is aligned |
| * to the maximum alignment of the combined sections and is the new section's |
| * alignment. The combined sections are aligned to their original alignment in |
| * the combined section. Any padded bytes to get the specified alignment are |
| * zeroed. |
| * |
| * The format of the relocation entries referenced by the reloff and nreloc |
| * fields of the section structure for mach object files is described in the |
| * header file <reloc.h>. |
| */ |
| struct section { /* for 32-bit architectures */ |
| char sectname[16]; /* name of this section */ |
| char segname[16]; /* segment this section goes in */ |
| uint32_t addr; /* memory address of this section */ |
| uint32_t size; /* size in bytes of this section */ |
| uint32_t offset; /* file offset of this section */ |
| uint32_t align; /* section alignment (power of 2) */ |
| uint32_t reloff; /* file offset of relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nreloc; /* number of relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags (section type and attributes)*/ |
| uint32_t reserved1; /* reserved (for offset or index) */ |
| uint32_t reserved2; /* reserved (for count or sizeof) */ |
| }; |
| |
| struct section_64 { /* for 64-bit architectures */ |
| char sectname[16]; /* name of this section */ |
| char segname[16]; /* segment this section goes in */ |
| uint64_t addr; /* memory address of this section */ |
| uint64_t size; /* size in bytes of this section */ |
| uint32_t offset; /* file offset of this section */ |
| uint32_t align; /* section alignment (power of 2) */ |
| uint32_t reloff; /* file offset of relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nreloc; /* number of relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t flags; /* flags (section type and attributes)*/ |
| uint32_t reserved1; /* reserved (for offset or index) */ |
| uint32_t reserved2; /* reserved (for count or sizeof) */ |
| uint32_t reserved3; /* reserved */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The flags field of a section structure is separated into two parts a section |
| * type and section attributes. The section types are mutually exclusive (it |
| * can only have one type) but the section attributes are not (it may have more |
| * than one attribute). |
| */ |
| #define SECTION_TYPE 0x000000ff /* 256 section types */ |
| #define SECTION_ATTRIBUTES 0xffffff00 /* 24 section attributes */ |
| |
| /* Constants for the type of a section */ |
| #define S_REGULAR 0x0 /* regular section */ |
| #define S_ZEROFILL 0x1 /* zero fill on demand section */ |
| #define S_CSTRING_LITERALS 0x2 /* section with only literal C strings*/ |
| #define S_4BYTE_LITERALS 0x3 /* section with only 4 byte literals */ |
| #define S_8BYTE_LITERALS 0x4 /* section with only 8 byte literals */ |
| #define S_LITERAL_POINTERS 0x5 /* section with only pointers to */ |
| /* literals */ |
| /* |
| * For the two types of symbol pointers sections and the symbol stubs section |
| * they have indirect symbol table entries. For each of the entries in the |
| * section the indirect symbol table entries, in corresponding order in the |
| * indirect symbol table, start at the index stored in the reserved1 field |
| * of the section structure. Since the indirect symbol table entries |
| * correspond to the entries in the section the number of indirect symbol table |
| * entries is inferred from the size of the section divided by the size of the |
| * entries in the section. For symbol pointers sections the size of the entries |
| * in the section is 4 bytes and for symbol stubs sections the byte size of the |
| * stubs is stored in the reserved2 field of the section structure. |
| */ |
| #define S_NON_LAZY_SYMBOL_POINTERS 0x6 /* section with only non-lazy |
| symbol pointers */ |
| #define S_LAZY_SYMBOL_POINTERS 0x7 /* section with only lazy symbol |
| pointers */ |
| #define S_SYMBOL_STUBS 0x8 /* section with only symbol |
| stubs, byte size of stub in |
| the reserved2 field */ |
| #define S_MOD_INIT_FUNC_POINTERS 0x9 /* section with only function |
| pointers for initialization*/ |
| #define S_MOD_TERM_FUNC_POINTERS 0xa /* section with only function |
| pointers for termination */ |
| #define S_COALESCED 0xb /* section contains symbols that |
| are to be coalesced */ |
| #define S_GB_ZEROFILL 0xc /* zero fill on demand section |
| (that can be larger than 4 |
| gigabytes) */ |
| #define S_INTERPOSING 0xd /* section with only pairs of |
| function pointers for |
| interposing */ |
| #define S_16BYTE_LITERALS 0xe /* section with only 16 byte |
| literals */ |
| #define S_DTRACE_DOF 0xf /* section contains |
| DTrace Object Format */ |
| #define S_LAZY_DYLIB_SYMBOL_POINTERS 0x10 /* section with only lazy |
| symbol pointers to lazy |
| loaded dylibs */ |
| /* |
| * Section types to support thread local variables |
| */ |
| #define S_THREAD_LOCAL_REGULAR 0x11 /* template of initial |
| values for TLVs */ |
| #define S_THREAD_LOCAL_ZEROFILL 0x12 /* template of initial |
| values for TLVs */ |
| #define S_THREAD_LOCAL_VARIABLES 0x13 /* TLV descriptors */ |
| #define S_THREAD_LOCAL_VARIABLE_POINTERS 0x14 /* pointers to TLV |
| descriptors */ |
| #define S_THREAD_LOCAL_INIT_FUNCTION_POINTERS 0x15 /* functions to call |
| to initialize TLV |
| values */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Constants for the section attributes part of the flags field of a section |
| * structure. |
| */ |
| #define SECTION_ATTRIBUTES_USR 0xff000000 /* User setable attributes */ |
| #define S_ATTR_PURE_INSTRUCTIONS 0x80000000 /* section contains only true |
| machine instructions */ |
| #define S_ATTR_NO_TOC 0x40000000 /* section contains coalesced |
| symbols that are not to be |
| in a ranlib table of |
| contents */ |
| #define S_ATTR_STRIP_STATIC_SYMS 0x20000000 /* ok to strip static symbols |
| in this section in files |
| with the MH_DYLDLINK flag */ |
| #define S_ATTR_NO_DEAD_STRIP 0x10000000 /* no dead stripping */ |
| #define S_ATTR_LIVE_SUPPORT 0x08000000 /* blocks are live if they |
| reference live blocks */ |
| #define S_ATTR_SELF_MODIFYING_CODE 0x04000000 /* Used with i386 code stubs |
| written on by dyld */ |
| /* |
| * If a segment contains any sections marked with S_ATTR_DEBUG then all |
| * sections in that segment must have this attribute. No section other than |
| * a section marked with this attribute may reference the contents of this |
| * section. A section with this attribute may contain no symbols and must have |
| * a section type S_REGULAR. The static linker will not copy section contents |
| * from sections with this attribute into its output file. These sections |
| * generally contain DWARF debugging info. |
| */ |
| #define S_ATTR_DEBUG 0x02000000 /* a debug section */ |
| #define SECTION_ATTRIBUTES_SYS 0x00ffff00 /* system setable attributes */ |
| #define S_ATTR_SOME_INSTRUCTIONS 0x00000400 /* section contains some |
| machine instructions */ |
| #define S_ATTR_EXT_RELOC 0x00000200 /* section has external |
| relocation entries */ |
| #define S_ATTR_LOC_RELOC 0x00000100 /* section has local |
| relocation entries */ |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * The names of segments and sections in them are mostly meaningless to the |
| * link-editor. But there are few things to support traditional UNIX |
| * executables that require the link-editor and assembler to use some names |
| * agreed upon by convention. |
| * |
| * The initial protection of the "__TEXT" segment has write protection turned |
| * off (not writeable). |
| * |
| * The link-editor will allocate common symbols at the end of the "__common" |
| * section in the "__DATA" segment. It will create the section and segment |
| * if needed. |
| */ |
| |
| /* The currently known segment names and the section names in those segments */ |
| |
| #define SEG_PAGEZERO "__PAGEZERO" /* the pagezero segment which has no */ |
| /* protections and catches NULL */ |
| /* references for MH_EXECUTE files */ |
| |
| |
| #define SEG_TEXT "__TEXT" /* the tradition UNIX text segment */ |
| #define SECT_TEXT "__text" /* the real text part of the text */ |
| /* section no headers, and no padding */ |
| #define SECT_FVMLIB_INIT0 "__fvmlib_init0" /* the fvmlib initialization */ |
| /* section */ |
| #define SECT_FVMLIB_INIT1 "__fvmlib_init1" /* the section following the */ |
| /* fvmlib initialization */ |
| /* section */ |
| |
| #define SEG_DATA "__DATA" /* the tradition UNIX data segment */ |
| #define SECT_DATA "__data" /* the real initialized data section */ |
| /* no padding, no bss overlap */ |
| #define SECT_BSS "__bss" /* the real uninitialized data section*/ |
| /* no padding */ |
| #define SECT_COMMON "__common" /* the section common symbols are */ |
| /* allocated in by the link editor */ |
| |
| #define SEG_OBJC "__OBJC" /* objective-C runtime segment */ |
| #define SECT_OBJC_SYMBOLS "__symbol_table" /* symbol table */ |
| #define SECT_OBJC_MODULES "__module_info" /* module information */ |
| #define SECT_OBJC_STRINGS "__selector_strs" /* string table */ |
| #define SECT_OBJC_REFS "__selector_refs" /* string table */ |
| |
| #define SEG_ICON "__ICON" /* the icon segment */ |
| #define SECT_ICON_HEADER "__header" /* the icon headers */ |
| #define SECT_ICON_TIFF "__tiff" /* the icons in tiff format */ |
| |
| #define SEG_LINKEDIT "__LINKEDIT" /* the segment containing all structs */ |
| /* created and maintained by the link */ |
| /* editor. Created with -seglinkedit */ |
| /* option to ld(1) for MH_EXECUTE and */ |
| /* FVMLIB file types only */ |
| |
| #define SEG_UNIXSTACK "__UNIXSTACK" /* the unix stack segment */ |
| |
| #define SEG_IMPORT "__IMPORT" /* the segment for the self (dyld) */ |
| /* modifing code stubs that has read, */ |
| /* write and execute permissions */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Fixed virtual memory shared libraries are identified by two things. The |
| * target pathname (the name of the library as found for execution), and the |
| * minor version number. The address of where the headers are loaded is in |
| * header_addr. (THIS IS OBSOLETE and no longer supported). |
| */ |
| struct fvmlib { |
| union lc_str name; /* library's target pathname */ |
| uint32_t minor_version; /* library's minor version number */ |
| uint32_t header_addr; /* library's header address */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A fixed virtual shared library (filetype == MH_FVMLIB in the mach header) |
| * contains a fvmlib_command (cmd == LC_IDFVMLIB) to identify the library. |
| * An object that uses a fixed virtual shared library also contains a |
| * fvmlib_command (cmd == LC_LOADFVMLIB) for each library it uses. |
| * (THIS IS OBSOLETE and no longer supported). |
| */ |
| struct fvmlib_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_IDFVMLIB or LC_LOADFVMLIB */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes pathname string */ |
| struct fvmlib fvmlib; /* the library identification */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Dynamicly linked shared libraries are identified by two things. The |
| * pathname (the name of the library as found for execution), and the |
| * compatibility version number. The pathname must match and the compatibility |
| * number in the user of the library must be greater than or equal to the |
| * library being used. The time stamp is used to record the time a library was |
| * built and copied into user so it can be use to determined if the library used |
| * at runtime is exactly the same as used to built the program. |
| */ |
| struct dylib { |
| union lc_str name; /* library's path name */ |
| uint32_t timestamp; /* library's build time stamp */ |
| uint32_t current_version; /* library's current version number */ |
| uint32_t compatibility_version; /* library's compatibility vers number*/ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A dynamically linked shared library (filetype == MH_DYLIB in the mach header) |
| * contains a dylib_command (cmd == LC_ID_DYLIB) to identify the library. |
| * An object that uses a dynamically linked shared library also contains a |
| * dylib_command (cmd == LC_LOAD_DYLIB, LC_LOAD_WEAK_DYLIB, or |
| * LC_REEXPORT_DYLIB) for each library it uses. |
| */ |
| struct dylib_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_ID_DYLIB, LC_LOAD_{,WEAK_}DYLIB, |
| LC_REEXPORT_DYLIB */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes pathname string */ |
| struct dylib dylib; /* the library identification */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A dynamically linked shared library may be a subframework of an umbrella |
| * framework. If so it will be linked with "-umbrella umbrella_name" where |
| * Where "umbrella_name" is the name of the umbrella framework. A subframework |
| * can only be linked against by its umbrella framework or other subframeworks |
| * that are part of the same umbrella framework. Otherwise the static link |
| * editor produces an error and states to link against the umbrella framework. |
| * The name of the umbrella framework for subframeworks is recorded in the |
| * following structure. |
| */ |
| struct sub_framework_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SUB_FRAMEWORK */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes umbrella string */ |
| union lc_str umbrella; /* the umbrella framework name */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * For dynamically linked shared libraries that are subframework of an umbrella |
| * framework they can allow clients other than the umbrella framework or other |
| * subframeworks in the same umbrella framework. To do this the subframework |
| * is built with "-allowable_client client_name" and an LC_SUB_CLIENT load |
| * command is created for each -allowable_client flag. The client_name is |
| * usually a framework name. It can also be a name used for bundles clients |
| * where the bundle is built with "-client_name client_name". |
| */ |
| struct sub_client_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SUB_CLIENT */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes client string */ |
| union lc_str client; /* the client name */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A dynamically linked shared library may be a sub_umbrella of an umbrella |
| * framework. If so it will be linked with "-sub_umbrella umbrella_name" where |
| * Where "umbrella_name" is the name of the sub_umbrella framework. When |
| * staticly linking when -twolevel_namespace is in effect a twolevel namespace |
| * umbrella framework will only cause its subframeworks and those frameworks |
| * listed as sub_umbrella frameworks to be implicited linked in. Any other |
| * dependent dynamic libraries will not be linked it when -twolevel_namespace |
| * is in effect. The primary library recorded by the static linker when |
| * resolving a symbol in these libraries will be the umbrella framework. |
| * Zero or more sub_umbrella frameworks may be use by an umbrella framework. |
| * The name of a sub_umbrella framework is recorded in the following structure. |
| */ |
| struct sub_umbrella_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SUB_UMBRELLA */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes sub_umbrella string */ |
| union lc_str sub_umbrella; /* the sub_umbrella framework name */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A dynamically linked shared library may be a sub_library of another shared |
| * library. If so it will be linked with "-sub_library library_name" where |
| * Where "library_name" is the name of the sub_library shared library. When |
| * staticly linking when -twolevel_namespace is in effect a twolevel namespace |
| * shared library will only cause its subframeworks and those frameworks |
| * listed as sub_umbrella frameworks and libraries listed as sub_libraries to |
| * be implicited linked in. Any other dependent dynamic libraries will not be |
| * linked it when -twolevel_namespace is in effect. The primary library |
| * recorded by the static linker when resolving a symbol in these libraries |
| * will be the umbrella framework (or dynamic library). Zero or more sub_library |
| * shared libraries may be use by an umbrella framework or (or dynamic library). |
| * The name of a sub_library framework is recorded in the following structure. |
| * For example /usr/lib/libobjc_profile.A.dylib would be recorded as "libobjc". |
| */ |
| struct sub_library_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SUB_LIBRARY */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes sub_library string */ |
| union lc_str sub_library; /* the sub_library name */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A program (filetype == MH_EXECUTE) that is |
| * prebound to its dynamic libraries has one of these for each library that |
| * the static linker used in prebinding. It contains a bit vector for the |
| * modules in the library. The bits indicate which modules are bound (1) and |
| * which are not (0) from the library. The bit for module 0 is the low bit |
| * of the first byte. So the bit for the Nth module is: |
| * (linked_modules[N/8] >> N%8) & 1 |
| */ |
| struct prebound_dylib_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_PREBOUND_DYLIB */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes strings */ |
| union lc_str name; /* library's path name */ |
| uint32_t nmodules; /* number of modules in library */ |
| union lc_str linked_modules; /* bit vector of linked modules */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A program that uses a dynamic linker contains a dylinker_command to identify |
| * the name of the dynamic linker (LC_LOAD_DYLINKER). And a dynamic linker |
| * contains a dylinker_command to identify the dynamic linker (LC_ID_DYLINKER). |
| * A file can have at most one of these. |
| * This struct is also used for the LC_DYLD_ENVIRONMENT load command and |
| * contains string for dyld to treat like environment variable. |
| */ |
| struct dylinker_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_ID_DYLINKER, LC_LOAD_DYLINKER or |
| LC_DYLD_ENVIRONMENT */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes pathname string */ |
| union lc_str name; /* dynamic linker's path name */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Thread commands contain machine-specific data structures suitable for |
| * use in the thread state primitives. The machine specific data structures |
| * follow the struct thread_command as follows. |
| * Each flavor of machine specific data structure is preceded by an unsigned |
| * long constant for the flavor of that data structure, an uint32_t |
| * that is the count of longs of the size of the state data structure and then |
| * the state data structure follows. This triple may be repeated for many |
| * flavors. The constants for the flavors, counts and state data structure |
| * definitions are expected to be in the header file <machine/thread_status.h>. |
| * These machine specific data structures sizes must be multiples of |
| * 4 bytes The cmdsize reflects the total size of the thread_command |
| * and all of the sizes of the constants for the flavors, counts and state |
| * data structures. |
| * |
| * For executable objects that are unix processes there will be one |
| * thread_command (cmd == LC_UNIXTHREAD) created for it by the link-editor. |
| * This is the same as a LC_THREAD, except that a stack is automatically |
| * created (based on the shell's limit for the stack size). Command arguments |
| * and environment variables are copied onto that stack. |
| */ |
| struct thread_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_THREAD or LC_UNIXTHREAD */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* total size of this command */ |
| /* uint32_t flavor flavor of thread state */ |
| /* uint32_t count count of longs in thread state */ |
| /* struct XXX_thread_state state thread state for this flavor */ |
| /* ... */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The routines command contains the address of the dynamic shared library |
| * initialization routine and an index into the module table for the module |
| * that defines the routine. Before any modules are used from the library the |
| * dynamic linker fully binds the module that defines the initialization routine |
| * and then calls it. This gets called before any module initialization |
| * routines (used for C++ static constructors) in the library. |
| */ |
| struct routines_command { /* for 32-bit architectures */ |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_ROUTINES */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* total size of this command */ |
| uint32_t init_address; /* address of initialization routine */ |
| uint32_t init_module; /* index into the module table that */ |
| /* the init routine is defined in */ |
| uint32_t reserved1; |
| uint32_t reserved2; |
| uint32_t reserved3; |
| uint32_t reserved4; |
| uint32_t reserved5; |
| uint32_t reserved6; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The 64-bit routines command. Same use as above. |
| */ |
| struct routines_command_64 { /* for 64-bit architectures */ |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_ROUTINES_64 */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* total size of this command */ |
| uint64_t init_address; /* address of initialization routine */ |
| uint64_t init_module; /* index into the module table that */ |
| /* the init routine is defined in */ |
| uint64_t reserved1; |
| uint64_t reserved2; |
| uint64_t reserved3; |
| uint64_t reserved4; |
| uint64_t reserved5; |
| uint64_t reserved6; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The symtab_command contains the offsets and sizes of the link-edit 4.3BSD |
| * "stab" style symbol table information as described in the header files |
| * <nlist.h> and <stab.h>. |
| */ |
| struct symtab_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SYMTAB */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct symtab_command) */ |
| uint32_t symoff; /* symbol table offset */ |
| uint32_t nsyms; /* number of symbol table entries */ |
| uint32_t stroff; /* string table offset */ |
| uint32_t strsize; /* string table size in bytes */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * This is the second set of the symbolic information which is used to support |
| * the data structures for the dynamically link editor. |
| * |
| * The original set of symbolic information in the symtab_command which contains |
| * the symbol and string tables must also be present when this load command is |
| * present. When this load command is present the symbol table is organized |
| * into three groups of symbols: |
| * local symbols (static and debugging symbols) - grouped by module |
| * defined external symbols - grouped by module (sorted by name if not lib) |
| * undefined external symbols (sorted by name if MH_BINDATLOAD is not set, |
| * and in order the were seen by the static |
| * linker if MH_BINDATLOAD is set) |
| * In this load command there are offsets and counts to each of the three groups |
| * of symbols. |
| * |
| * This load command contains a the offsets and sizes of the following new |
| * symbolic information tables: |
| * table of contents |
| * module table |
| * reference symbol table |
| * indirect symbol table |
| * The first three tables above (the table of contents, module table and |
| * reference symbol table) are only present if the file is a dynamically linked |
| * shared library. For executable and object modules, which are files |
| * containing only one module, the information that would be in these three |
| * tables is determined as follows: |
| * table of contents - the defined external symbols are sorted by name |
| * module table - the file contains only one module so everything in the |
| * file is part of the module. |
| * reference symbol table - is the defined and undefined external symbols |
| * |
| * For dynamically linked shared library files this load command also contains |
| * offsets and sizes to the pool of relocation entries for all sections |
| * separated into two groups: |
| * external relocation entries |
| * local relocation entries |
| * For executable and object modules the relocation entries continue to hang |
| * off the section structures. |
| */ |
| struct dysymtab_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_DYSYMTAB */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct dysymtab_command) */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The symbols indicated by symoff and nsyms of the LC_SYMTAB load command |
| * are grouped into the following three groups: |
| * local symbols (further grouped by the module they are from) |
| * defined external symbols (further grouped by the module they are from) |
| * undefined symbols |
| * |
| * The local symbols are used only for debugging. The dynamic binding |
| * process may have to use them to indicate to the debugger the local |
| * symbols for a module that is being bound. |
| * |
| * The last two groups are used by the dynamic binding process to do the |
| * binding (indirectly through the module table and the reference symbol |
| * table when this is a dynamically linked shared library file). |
| */ |
| uint32_t ilocalsym; /* index to local symbols */ |
| uint32_t nlocalsym; /* number of local symbols */ |
| |
| uint32_t iextdefsym;/* index to externally defined symbols */ |
| uint32_t nextdefsym;/* number of externally defined symbols */ |
| |
| uint32_t iundefsym; /* index to undefined symbols */ |
| uint32_t nundefsym; /* number of undefined symbols */ |
| |
| /* |
| * For the for the dynamic binding process to find which module a symbol |
| * is defined in the table of contents is used (analogous to the ranlib |
| * structure in an archive) which maps defined external symbols to modules |
| * they are defined in. This exists only in a dynamically linked shared |
| * library file. For executable and object modules the defined external |
| * symbols are sorted by name and is use as the table of contents. |
| */ |
| uint32_t tocoff; /* file offset to table of contents */ |
| uint32_t ntoc; /* number of entries in table of contents */ |
| |
| /* |
| * To support dynamic binding of "modules" (whole object files) the symbol |
| * table must reflect the modules that the file was created from. This is |
| * done by having a module table that has indexes and counts into the merged |
| * tables for each module. The module structure that these two entries |
| * refer to is described below. This exists only in a dynamically linked |
| * shared library file. For executable and object modules the file only |
| * contains one module so everything in the file belongs to the module. |
| */ |
| uint32_t modtaboff; /* file offset to module table */ |
| uint32_t nmodtab; /* number of module table entries */ |
| |
| /* |
| * To support dynamic module binding the module structure for each module |
| * indicates the external references (defined and undefined) each module |
| * makes. For each module there is an offset and a count into the |
| * reference symbol table for the symbols that the module references. |
| * This exists only in a dynamically linked shared library file. For |
| * executable and object modules the defined external symbols and the |
| * undefined external symbols indicates the external references. |
| */ |
| uint32_t extrefsymoff; /* offset to referenced symbol table */ |
| uint32_t nextrefsyms; /* number of referenced symbol table entries */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The sections that contain "symbol pointers" and "routine stubs" have |
| * indexes and (implied counts based on the size of the section and fixed |
| * size of the entry) into the "indirect symbol" table for each pointer |
| * and stub. For every section of these two types the index into the |
| * indirect symbol table is stored in the section header in the field |
| * reserved1. An indirect symbol table entry is simply a 32bit index into |
| * the symbol table to the symbol that the pointer or stub is referring to. |
| * The indirect symbol table is ordered to match the entries in the section. |
| */ |
| uint32_t indirectsymoff; /* file offset to the indirect symbol table */ |
| uint32_t nindirectsyms; /* number of indirect symbol table entries */ |
| |
| /* |
| * To support relocating an individual module in a library file quickly the |
| * external relocation entries for each module in the library need to be |
| * accessed efficiently. Since the relocation entries can't be accessed |
| * through the section headers for a library file they are separated into |
| * groups of local and external entries further grouped by module. In this |
| * case the presents of this load command who's extreloff, nextrel, |
| * locreloff and nlocrel fields are non-zero indicates that the relocation |
| * entries of non-merged sections are not referenced through the section |
| * structures (and the reloff and nreloc fields in the section headers are |
| * set to zero). |
| * |
| * Since the relocation entries are not accessed through the section headers |
| * this requires the r_address field to be something other than a section |
| * offset to identify the item to be relocated. In this case r_address is |
| * set to the offset from the vmaddr of the first LC_SEGMENT command. |
| * For MH_SPLIT_SEGS images r_address is set to the the offset from the |
| * vmaddr of the first read-write LC_SEGMENT command. |
| * |
| * The relocation entries are grouped by module and the module table |
| * entries have indexes and counts into them for the group of external |
| * relocation entries for that the module. |
| * |
| * For sections that are merged across modules there must not be any |
| * remaining external relocation entries for them (for merged sections |
| * remaining relocation entries must be local). |
| */ |
| uint32_t extreloff; /* offset to external relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nextrel; /* number of external relocation entries */ |
| |
| /* |
| * All the local relocation entries are grouped together (they are not |
| * grouped by their module since they are only used if the object is moved |
| * from it staticly link edited address). |
| */ |
| uint32_t locreloff; /* offset to local relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nlocrel; /* number of local relocation entries */ |
| |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * An indirect symbol table entry is simply a 32bit index into the symbol table |
| * to the symbol that the pointer or stub is refering to. Unless it is for a |
| * non-lazy symbol pointer section for a defined symbol which strip(1) as |
| * removed. In which case it has the value INDIRECT_SYMBOL_LOCAL. If the |
| * symbol was also absolute INDIRECT_SYMBOL_ABS is or'ed with that. |
| */ |
| #define INDIRECT_SYMBOL_LOCAL 0x80000000 |
| #define INDIRECT_SYMBOL_ABS 0x40000000 |
| |
| |
| /* a table of contents entry */ |
| struct dylib_table_of_contents { |
| uint32_t symbol_index; /* the defined external symbol |
| (index into the symbol table) */ |
| uint32_t module_index; /* index into the module table this symbol |
| is defined in */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* a module table entry */ |
| struct dylib_module { |
| uint32_t module_name; /* the module name (index into string table) */ |
| |
| uint32_t iextdefsym; /* index into externally defined symbols */ |
| uint32_t nextdefsym; /* number of externally defined symbols */ |
| uint32_t irefsym; /* index into reference symbol table */ |
| uint32_t nrefsym; /* number of reference symbol table entries */ |
| uint32_t ilocalsym; /* index into symbols for local symbols */ |
| uint32_t nlocalsym; /* number of local symbols */ |
| |
| uint32_t iextrel; /* index into external relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nextrel; /* number of external relocation entries */ |
| |
| uint32_t iinit_iterm; /* low 16 bits are the index into the init |
| section, high 16 bits are the index into |
| the term section */ |
| uint32_t ninit_nterm; /* low 16 bits are the number of init section |
| entries, high 16 bits are the number of |
| term section entries */ |
| |
| uint32_t /* for this module address of the start of */ |
| objc_module_info_addr; /* the (__OBJC,__module_info) section */ |
| uint32_t /* for this module size of */ |
| objc_module_info_size; /* the (__OBJC,__module_info) section */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* a 64-bit module table entry */ |
| struct dylib_module_64 { |
| uint32_t module_name; /* the module name (index into string table) */ |
| |
| uint32_t iextdefsym; /* index into externally defined symbols */ |
| uint32_t nextdefsym; /* number of externally defined symbols */ |
| uint32_t irefsym; /* index into reference symbol table */ |
| uint32_t nrefsym; /* number of reference symbol table entries */ |
| uint32_t ilocalsym; /* index into symbols for local symbols */ |
| uint32_t nlocalsym; /* number of local symbols */ |
| |
| uint32_t iextrel; /* index into external relocation entries */ |
| uint32_t nextrel; /* number of external relocation entries */ |
| |
| uint32_t iinit_iterm; /* low 16 bits are the index into the init |
| section, high 16 bits are the index into |
| the term section */ |
| uint32_t ninit_nterm; /* low 16 bits are the number of init section |
| entries, high 16 bits are the number of |
| term section entries */ |
| |
| uint32_t /* for this module size of */ |
| objc_module_info_size; /* the (__OBJC,__module_info) section */ |
| uint64_t /* for this module address of the start of */ |
| objc_module_info_addr; /* the (__OBJC,__module_info) section */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The entries in the reference symbol table are used when loading the module |
| * (both by the static and dynamic link editors) and if the module is unloaded |
| * or replaced. Therefore all external symbols (defined and undefined) are |
| * listed in the module's reference table. The flags describe the type of |
| * reference that is being made. The constants for the flags are defined in |
| * <mach-o/nlist.h> as they are also used for symbol table entries. |
| */ |
| struct dylib_reference { |
| uint32_t isym:24, /* index into the symbol table */ |
| flags:8; /* flags to indicate the type of reference */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The twolevel_hints_command contains the offset and number of hints in the |
| * two-level namespace lookup hints table. |
| */ |
| struct twolevel_hints_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_TWOLEVEL_HINTS */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct twolevel_hints_command) */ |
| uint32_t offset; /* offset to the hint table */ |
| uint32_t nhints; /* number of hints in the hint table */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The entries in the two-level namespace lookup hints table are twolevel_hint |
| * structs. These provide hints to the dynamic link editor where to start |
| * looking for an undefined symbol in a two-level namespace image. The |
| * isub_image field is an index into the sub-images (sub-frameworks and |
| * sub-umbrellas list) that made up the two-level image that the undefined |
| * symbol was found in when it was built by the static link editor. If |
| * isub-image is 0 the the symbol is expected to be defined in library and not |
| * in the sub-images. If isub-image is non-zero it is an index into the array |
| * of sub-images for the umbrella with the first index in the sub-images being |
| * 1. The array of sub-images is the ordered list of sub-images of the umbrella |
| * that would be searched for a symbol that has the umbrella recorded as its |
| * primary library. The table of contents index is an index into the |
| * library's table of contents. This is used as the starting point of the |
| * binary search or a directed linear search. |
| */ |
| struct twolevel_hint { |
| uint32_t |
| isub_image:8, /* index into the sub images */ |
| itoc:24; /* index into the table of contents */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The prebind_cksum_command contains the value of the original check sum for |
| * prebound files or zero. When a prebound file is first created or modified |
| * for other than updating its prebinding information the value of the check sum |
| * is set to zero. When the file has it prebinding re-done and if the value of |
| * the check sum is zero the original check sum is calculated and stored in |
| * cksum field of this load command in the output file. If when the prebinding |
| * is re-done and the cksum field is non-zero it is left unchanged from the |
| * input file. |
| */ |
| struct prebind_cksum_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_PREBIND_CKSUM */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct prebind_cksum_command) */ |
| uint32_t cksum; /* the check sum or zero */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The uuid load command contains a single 128-bit unique random number that |
| * identifies an object produced by the static link editor. |
| */ |
| struct uuid_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_UUID */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct uuid_command) */ |
| uint8_t uuid[16]; /* the 128-bit uuid */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The rpath_command contains a path which at runtime should be added to |
| * the current run path used to find @rpath prefixed dylibs. |
| */ |
| struct rpath_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_RPATH */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes string */ |
| union lc_str path; /* path to add to run path */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The linkedit_data_command contains the offsets and sizes of a blob |
| * of data in the __LINKEDIT segment. |
| */ |
| struct linkedit_data_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_CODE_SIGNATURE, LC_SEGMENT_SPLIT_INFO, |
| or LC_FUNCTION_STARTS */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct linkedit_data_command) */ |
| uint32_t dataoff; /* file offset of data in __LINKEDIT segment */ |
| uint32_t datasize; /* file size of data in __LINKEDIT segment */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The encryption_info_command contains the file offset and size of an |
| * of an encrypted segment. |
| */ |
| struct encryption_info_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_ENCRYPTION_INFO */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct encryption_info_command) */ |
| uint32_t cryptoff; /* file offset of encrypted range */ |
| uint32_t cryptsize; /* file size of encrypted range */ |
| uint32_t cryptid; /* which enryption system, |
| 0 means not-encrypted yet */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The version_min_command contains the min OS version on which this |
| * binary was built to run. |
| */ |
| struct version_min_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX or |
| LC_VERSION_MIN_IPHONEOS */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct min_version_command) */ |
| uint32_t version; /* X.Y.Z is encoded in nibbles xxxx.yy.zz */ |
| uint32_t reserved; /* zero */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The dyld_info_command contains the file offsets and sizes of |
| * the new compressed form of the information dyld needs to |
| * load the image. This information is used by dyld on Mac OS X |
| * 10.6 and later. All information pointed to by this command |
| * is encoded using byte streams, so no endian swapping is needed |
| * to interpret it. |
| */ |
| struct dyld_info_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_DYLD_INFO or LC_DYLD_INFO_ONLY */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct dyld_info_command) */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Dyld rebases an image whenever dyld loads it at an address different |
| * from its preferred address. The rebase information is a stream |
| * of byte sized opcodes whose symbolic names start with REBASE_OPCODE_. |
| * Conceptually the rebase information is a table of tuples: |
| * <seg-index, seg-offset, type> |
| * The opcodes are a compressed way to encode the table by only |
| * encoding when a column changes. In addition simple patterns |
| * like "every n'th offset for m times" can be encoded in a few |
| * bytes. |
| */ |
| uint32_t rebase_off; /* file offset to rebase info */ |
| uint32_t rebase_size; /* size of rebase info */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Dyld binds an image during the loading process, if the image |
| * requires any pointers to be initialized to symbols in other images. |
| * The bind information is a stream of byte sized |
| * opcodes whose symbolic names start with BIND_OPCODE_. |
| * Conceptually the bind information is a table of tuples: |
| * <seg-index, seg-offset, type, symbol-library-ordinal, symbol-name, addend> |
| * The opcodes are a compressed way to encode the table by only |
| * encoding when a column changes. In addition simple patterns |
| * like for runs of pointers initialzed to the same value can be |
| * encoded in a few bytes. |
| */ |
| uint32_t bind_off; /* file offset to binding info */ |
| uint32_t bind_size; /* size of binding info */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Some C++ programs require dyld to unique symbols so that all |
| * images in the process use the same copy of some code/data. |
| * This step is done after binding. The content of the weak_bind |
| * info is an opcode stream like the bind_info. But it is sorted |
| * alphabetically by symbol name. This enable dyld to walk |
| * all images with weak binding information in order and look |
| * for collisions. If there are no collisions, dyld does |
| * no updating. That means that some fixups are also encoded |
| * in the bind_info. For instance, all calls to "operator new" |
| * are first bound to libstdc++.dylib using the information |
| * in bind_info. Then if some image overrides operator new |
| * that is detected when the weak_bind information is processed |
| * and the call to operator new is then rebound. |
| */ |
| uint32_t weak_bind_off; /* file offset to weak binding info */ |
| uint32_t weak_bind_size; /* size of weak binding info */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Some uses of external symbols do not need to be bound immediately. |
| * Instead they can be lazily bound on first use. The lazy_bind |
| * are contains a stream of BIND opcodes to bind all lazy symbols. |
| * Normal use is that dyld ignores the lazy_bind section when |
| * loading an image. Instead the static linker arranged for the |
| * lazy pointer to initially point to a helper function which |
| * pushes the offset into the lazy_bind area for the symbol |
| * needing to be bound, then jumps to dyld which simply adds |
| * the offset to lazy_bind_off to get the information on what |
| * to bind. |
| */ |
| uint32_t lazy_bind_off; /* file offset to lazy binding info */ |
| uint32_t lazy_bind_size; /* size of lazy binding infs */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The symbols exported by a dylib are encoded in a trie. This |
| * is a compact representation that factors out common prefixes. |
| * It also reduces LINKEDIT pages in RAM because it encodes all |
| * information (name, address, flags) in one small, contiguous range. |
| * The export area is a stream of nodes. The first node sequentially |
| * is the start node for the trie. |
| * |
| * Nodes for a symbol start with a uleb128 that is the length of |
| * the exported symbol information for the string so far. |
| * If there is no exported symbol, the node starts with a zero byte. |
| * If there is exported info, it follows the length. First is |
| * a uleb128 containing flags. Normally, it is followed by a |
| * uleb128 encoded offset which is location of the content named |
| * by the symbol from the mach_header for the image. If the flags |
| * is EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_REEXPORT, then following the flags is |
| * a uleb128 encoded library ordinal, then a zero terminated |
| * UTF8 string. If the string is zero length, then the symbol |
| * is re-export from the specified dylib with the same name. |
| * |
| * After the optional exported symbol information is a byte of |
| * how many edges (0-255) that this node has leaving it, |
| * followed by each edge. |
| * Each edge is a zero terminated UTF8 of the addition chars |
| * in the symbol, followed by a uleb128 offset for the node that |
| * edge points to. |
| * |
| */ |
| uint32_t export_off; /* file offset to lazy binding info */ |
| uint32_t export_size; /* size of lazy binding infs */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The following are used to encode rebasing information |
| */ |
| #define REBASE_TYPE_POINTER 1 |
| #define REBASE_TYPE_TEXT_ABSOLUTE32 2 |
| #define REBASE_TYPE_TEXT_PCREL32 3 |
| |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_MASK 0xF0 |
| #define REBASE_IMMEDIATE_MASK 0x0F |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_DONE 0x00 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_SET_TYPE_IMM 0x10 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_SET_SEGMENT_AND_OFFSET_ULEB 0x20 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_ADD_ADDR_ULEB 0x30 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_ADD_ADDR_IMM_SCALED 0x40 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_DO_REBASE_IMM_TIMES 0x50 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_DO_REBASE_ULEB_TIMES 0x60 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_DO_REBASE_ADD_ADDR_ULEB 0x70 |
| #define REBASE_OPCODE_DO_REBASE_ULEB_TIMES_SKIPPING_ULEB 0x80 |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * The following are used to encode binding information |
| */ |
| #define BIND_TYPE_POINTER 1 |
| #define BIND_TYPE_TEXT_ABSOLUTE32 2 |
| #define BIND_TYPE_TEXT_PCREL32 3 |
| |
| #define BIND_SPECIAL_DYLIB_SELF 0 |
| #define BIND_SPECIAL_DYLIB_MAIN_EXECUTABLE -1 |
| #define BIND_SPECIAL_DYLIB_FLAT_LOOKUP -2 |
| |
| #define BIND_SYMBOL_FLAGS_WEAK_IMPORT 0x1 |
| #define BIND_SYMBOL_FLAGS_NON_WEAK_DEFINITION 0x8 |
| |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_MASK 0xF0 |
| #define BIND_IMMEDIATE_MASK 0x0F |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_DONE 0x00 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_ORDINAL_IMM 0x10 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_ORDINAL_ULEB 0x20 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_DYLIB_SPECIAL_IMM 0x30 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_SYMBOL_TRAILING_FLAGS_IMM 0x40 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_TYPE_IMM 0x50 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_ADDEND_SLEB 0x60 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_SET_SEGMENT_AND_OFFSET_ULEB 0x70 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_ADD_ADDR_ULEB 0x80 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_DO_BIND 0x90 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_DO_BIND_ADD_ADDR_ULEB 0xA0 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_DO_BIND_ADD_ADDR_IMM_SCALED 0xB0 |
| #define BIND_OPCODE_DO_BIND_ULEB_TIMES_SKIPPING_ULEB 0xC0 |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * The following are used on the flags byte of a terminal node |
| * in the export information. |
| */ |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_KIND_MASK 0x03 |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_KIND_REGULAR 0x00 |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_KIND_THREAD_LOCAL 0x01 |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_WEAK_DEFINITION 0x04 |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_REEXPORT 0x08 |
| #define EXPORT_SYMBOL_FLAGS_STUB_AND_RESOLVER 0x10 |
| |
| /* |
| * The symseg_command contains the offset and size of the GNU style |
| * symbol table information as described in the header file <symseg.h>. |
| * The symbol roots of the symbol segments must also be aligned properly |
| * in the file. So the requirement of keeping the offsets aligned to a |
| * multiple of a 4 bytes translates to the length field of the symbol |
| * roots also being a multiple of a long. Also the padding must again be |
| * zeroed. (THIS IS OBSOLETE and no longer supported). |
| */ |
| struct symseg_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_SYMSEG */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* sizeof(struct symseg_command) */ |
| uint32_t offset; /* symbol segment offset */ |
| uint32_t size; /* symbol segment size in bytes */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The ident_command contains a free format string table following the |
| * ident_command structure. The strings are null terminated and the size of |
| * the command is padded out with zero bytes to a multiple of 4 bytes/ |
| * (THIS IS OBSOLETE and no longer supported). |
| */ |
| struct ident_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_IDENT */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* strings that follow this command */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * The fvmfile_command contains a reference to a file to be loaded at the |
| * specified virtual address. (Presently, this command is reserved for |
| * internal use. The kernel ignores this command when loading a program into |
| * memory). |
| */ |
| struct fvmfile_command { |
| uint32_t cmd; /* LC_FVMFILE */ |
| uint32_t cmdsize; /* includes pathname string */ |
| union lc_str name; /* files pathname */ |
| uint32_t header_addr; /* files virtual address */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Sections of type S_THREAD_LOCAL_VARIABLES contain an array |
| * of tlv_descriptor structures. |
| */ |
| struct tlv_descriptor |
| { |
| void* (*thunk)(struct tlv_descriptor*); |
| unsigned long key; |
| unsigned long offset; |
| }; |
| |
| #endif /* _MACHO_LOADER_H_ */ |