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NAME

       dlclose, dlopen, dlmopen - open and close a shared object

SYNOPSIS

       #include <dlfcn.h>

       void *dlopen(const char *filename, int flags);

       int dlclose(void *handle);

       #define _GNU_SOURCE
       #include <dlfcn.h>

       void *dlmopen (Lmid_t lmid, const char *filename, int flags);

       Link with -ldl.

DESCRIPTION

   dlopen()
       The  function dlopen() loads the dynamic shared object (shared library) file named by the null-terminated
       string filename and returns an opaque "handle" for the loaded object.  This handle is employed with other
       functions in the dlopen API, such as dlsym(3), dladdr(3), dlinfo(3), and dlclose().

       If  filename  is  NULL,  then  the returned handle is for the main program.  If filename contains a slash
       ("/"), then it is interpreted as a (relative  or  absolute)  pathname.   Otherwise,  the  dynamic  linker
       searches for the object as follows (see ld.so(8) for further details):

       o   (ELF  only)  If  the  executable  file  for the calling program contains a DT_RPATH tag, and does not
           contain a DT_RUNPATH tag, then the directories listed in the DT_RPATH tag are searched.

       o   If, at the time that the program was started, the environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH was defined to
           contain a colon-separated list of directories, then these are searched.  (As a security measure, this
           variable is ignored for set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs.)

       o   (ELF only) If the executable file for the  calling  program  contains  a  DT_RUNPATH  tag,  then  the
           directories listed in that tag are searched.

       o   The  cache file /etc/ld.so.cache (maintained by ldconfig(8)) is checked to see whether it contains an
           entry for filename.

       o   The directories /lib and /usr/lib are searched (in that order).

       If the object specified by filename has dependencies  on  other  shared  objects,  then  these  are  also
       automatically loaded by the dynamic linker using the same rules.  (This process may occur recursively, if
       those objects in turn have dependencies, and so on.)

       One of the following two values must be included in flags:

       RTLD_LAZY
              Perform lazy binding.  Only resolve symbols as the code that references them is executed.  If  the
              symbol  is  never  referenced,  then  it  is  never resolved.  (Lazy binding is performed only for
              function references; references to variables are always immediately bound when the  shared  object
              is  loaded.)   Since  glibc  2.1.1,  this  flag  is  overridden  by  the effect of the LD_BIND_NOW
              environment variable.

       RTLD_NOW
              If this value is specified, or the environment variable LD_BIND_NOW is set to a  nonempty  string,
              all  undefined  symbols in the shared object are resolved before dlopen() returns.  If this cannot
              be done, an error is returned.

       Zero or more of the following values may also be ORed in flags:

       RTLD_GLOBAL
              The symbols defined by this shared  object  will  be  made  available  for  symbol  resolution  of
              subsequently loaded shared objects.

       RTLD_LOCAL
              This  is  the  converse  of  RTLD_GLOBAL,  and  the default if neither flag is specified.  Symbols
              defined in this shared object are not made available to resolve references in subsequently  loaded
              shared objects.

       RTLD_NODELETE (since glibc 2.2)
              Do not unload the shared object during dlclose().  Consequently, the object's static variables are
              not reinitialized if the object is reloaded with dlopen() at a later time.

       RTLD_NOLOAD (since glibc 2.2)
              Don't load the shared object.  This can be  used  to  test  if  the  object  is  already  resident
              (dlopen()  returns  NULL  if  it is not, or the object's handle if it is resident).  This flag can
              also be used to promote the flags on a shared object that  is  already  loaded.   For  example,  a
              shared   object   that   was   previously   loaded   with   RTLD_LOCAL   can   be   reopened  with
              RTLD_NOLOAD | RTLD_GLOBAL.

       RTLD_DEEPBIND (since glibc 2.3.4)
              Place the lookup scope of the symbols in this shared object ahead of the global scope.  This means
              that  a  self-contained  object  will use its own symbols in preference to global symbols with the
              same name contained in objects that have already been loaded.

       If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the main  program.   When  given  to  dlsym(),  this
       handle causes a search for a symbol in the main program, followed by all shared objects loaded at program
       startup, and then all shared objects loaded by dlopen() with the flag RTLD_GLOBAL.

       External references in the shared  object  are  resolved  using  the  shared  objects  in  that  object's
       dependency list and any other objects previously opened with the RTLD_GLOBAL flag.  If the executable was
       linked with the flag "-rdynamic" (or, synonymously, "--export-dynamic"), then the global symbols  in  the
       executable will also be used to resolve references in a dynamically loaded shared object.

       If the same shared object is loaded again with dlopen(), the same object handle is returned.  The dynamic
       linker maintains reference counts for object handles, so  a  dynamically  loaded  shared  object  is  not
       deallocated  until  dlclose()  has  been called on it as many times as dlopen() has succeeded on it.  Any
       initialization returns (see below) are called just once.  However, a subsequent dlopen() call that  loads
       the  same shared object with RTLD_NOW may force symbol resolution for a shared object earlier loaded with
       RTLD_LAZY.

       If dlopen() fails for any reason, it returns NULL.

   dlmopen()
       This function performs the same task as dlopen()—the filename and flags arguments, as well as the  return
       value, are the same, except for the differences noted below.

       The  dlmopen()  function differs from dlopen() primarily in that it accepts an additional argument, lmid,
       that specifies the link-map list (also referred to as a namespace) in which the shared object  should  be
       loaded.   (By comparison, dlopen() adds the dynamically loaded shared object to the same namespace as the
       shared object from which the dlopen() call is made.)  The Lmid_t type is an opaque handle that refers  to
       a namespace.

       The  lmid  argument  is either the ID of an existing namespace (which can be obtained using the dlinfo(3)
       RTLD_DI_LMID request) or one of the following special values:

       LM_ID_BASE
              Load the shared object in the initial namespace (i.e., the application's namespace).

       LM_ID_NEWLM
              Create a new namespace and load the shared object in that namespace.  The object  must  have  been
              correctly  linked  to  reference  all  of the other shared objects that it requires, since the new
              namespace is initially empty.

       If filename is NULL, then the only permitted value for lmid is LM_ID_BASE.

   dlclose()
       The function dlclose() decrements the reference count on the dynamically loaded shared object referred to
       by  handle.   If the reference count drops to zero, then the object is unloaded.  All shared objects that
       were automatically loaded when dlopen() was invoked on the object referred to by handle  are  recursively
       closed in the same manner.

       A successful return from dlclose() does not guarantee that the symbols associated with handle are removed
       from the caller's address space.  In addition to references resulting from  explicit  dlopen()  calls,  a
       shared  object  may  have been implicitly loaded (and reference counted) because of dependencies in other
       shared objects.  Only when all references have been released can the shared object be  removed  from  the
       address space.

RETURN VALUE

       On success, dlopen() and dlmopen() return a non-NULL handle for the loaded library.  On error (file could
       not be found, was not readable, had the wrong format, or caused errors during loading),  these  functions
       return NULL.

       On success, dlclose() returns 0; on error, it returns a nonzero value.

       Errors from these functions can be diagnosed using dlerror(3).

VERSIONS

       dlopen() and dlclose() are present in glibc 2.0 and later.  dlmopen() first appeared in glibc 2.3.4.

ATTRIBUTES

       For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).

       ┌───────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────┐
       │InterfaceAttributeValue   │
       ├───────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────┤
       │dlopen(), dlmopen(), dlclose() │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
       └───────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────┘

CONFORMING TO

       POSIX.1-2001 describes dlclose() and dlopen().  The dlmopen() function is a GNU extension.

       The  RTLD_NOLOAD, RTLD_NODELETE, and RTLD_DEEPBIND flags are GNU extensions; the first two of these flags
       are also present on Solaris.

NOTES

   dlmopen() and namespaces
       A link-map list defines an isolated namespace for the  resolution  of  symbols  by  the  dynamic  linker.
       Within  a  namespace,  dependent  shared  objects are implicitly loaded according to the usual rules, and
       symbol references are likewise resolved according to the usual rules, but such resolution is confined  to
       the  definitions  provided  by  the  objects  that  have been (explicitly and implicitly) loaded into the
       namespace.

       The dlmopen() function permits object-load isolation—the ability  to  load  a  shared  object  in  a  new
       namespace  without  exposing the rest of the application to the symbols made available by the new object.
       Note that the use of the RTLD_LOCAL flag is not sufficient for this purpose, since it prevents  a  shared
       object's symbols from being available to any other shared object.  In some cases, we may want to make the
       symbols provided by a dynamically loaded shared object available to (a subset of)  other  shared  objects
       without  exposing  those  symbols  to  the  entire application.  This can be achieved by using a separate
       namespace and the RTLD_GLOBAL flag.

       The dlmopen() function also can be used to  provide  better  isolation  than  the  RTLD_LOCAL  flag.   In
       particular, shared objects loaded with RTLD_LOCAL may be promoted to RTLD_GLOBAL if they are dependencies
       of another shared object loaded with RTLD_GLOBAL.  Thus, RTLD_LOCAL is insufficient to isolate  a  loaded
       shared  object  except  in  the  (uncommon)  case  where  one has explicit control over all shared object
       dependencies.

       Possible uses of dlmopen() are plugins where the author of the plugin-loading framework can't  trust  the
       plugin authors and does not wish any undefined symbols from the plugin framework to be resolved to plugin
       symbols.  Another use is to load the same object more than once.  Without  the  use  of  dlmopen(),  this
       would  require  the  creation of distinct copies of the shared object file.  Using dlmopen(), this can be
       achieved by loading the same shared object file into different namespaces.

       The glibc implementation supports a maximum of 16 namespaces.

   Initialization and finalization functions
       Shared    objects    may    export    functions    using     the     __attribute__((constructor))     and
       __attribute__((destructor))  function  attributes.   Constructor  functions  are executed before dlopen()
       returns, and destructor functions are executed before dlclose() returns.   A  shared  object  may  export
       multiple  constructors  and destructors, and priorities can be associated with each function to determine
       the order in which they are executed.  See the gcc info pages (under "Function attributes")  for  further
       information.

       An older method of (partially) achieving the same result is via the use of two special symbols recognized
       by the linker: _init and _fini.  If a dynamically loaded shared object exports a routine  named  _init(),
       then  that code is executed after loading a shared object, before dlopen() returns.  If the shared object
       exports a routine named _fini(), then that routine is called just before the object is unloaded.  In this
       case,  one  must  avoid linking against the system startup files, which contain default versions of these
       files; this can be done by using the gcc(1) -nostartfiles command-line option.

       Use of _init and _fini is now deprecated in favor of the  aforementioned  constructors  and  destructors,
       which among other advantages, permit multiple initialization and finalization functions to be defined.

       Since  glibc 2.2.3, atexit(3) can be used to register an exit handler that is automatically called when a
       shared object is unloaded.

   History
       These functions are part of the dlopen API, derived from SunOS.

EXAMPLE

       The program below loads the (glibc) math library, looks up the address of the cos(3) function, and prints
       the cosine of 2.0.  The following is an example of building and running the program:

           $ cc dlopen_demo.c -ldl
           $ ./a.out
           -0.416147

   Program source
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <dlfcn.h>
       #include <gnu/lib-names.h>  /* Defines LIBM_SO (which will be a
                                      string such as "libm.so.6") */
       int
       main(void)
       {
           void *handle;
           double (*cosine)(double);
           char *error;

           handle = dlopen(LIBM_SO, RTLD_LAZY);
           if (!handle) {
               fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", dlerror());
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           dlerror();    /* Clear any existing error */

           cosine = (double (*)(double)) dlsym(handle, "cos");

           /* According to the ISO C standard, casting between function
              pointers and 'void *', as done above, produces undefined results.
              POSIX.1-2003 and POSIX.1-2008 accepted this state of affairs and
              proposed the following workaround:

                  *(void **) (&cosine) = dlsym(handle, "cos");

              This (clumsy) cast conforms with the ISO C standard and will
              avoid any compiler warnings.

              The 2013 Technical Corrigendum to POSIX.1-2008 (a.k.a.
              POSIX.1-2013) improved matters by requiring that conforming
              implementations support casting 'void *' to a function pointer.
              Nevertheless, some compilers (e.g., gcc with the '-pedantic'
              option) may complain about the cast used in this program. */

           error = dlerror();
           if (error != NULL) {
               fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", error);
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           printf("%f\n", (*cosine)(2.0));
           dlclose(handle);
           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

BUGS

       As  at  glibc  2.21,  specifying  the  RTLD_GLOBAL  flag  when  calling  dlmopen()  generates  an  error.
       Furthermore, specifying RTLD_GLOBAL when calling dlopen() results in a program  crash  (SIGSEGV)  if  the
       call is made from any object loaded in a namespace other than the initial namespace.

SEE ALSO

       ld(1),  ldd(1),  pldd(1),  dl_iterate_phdr(3), dladdr(3), dlerror(3), dlinfo(3), dlsym(3), rtld-audit(7),
       ld.so(8), ldconfig(8)

       gcc info pages, ld info pages

COLOPHON

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       information   about   reporting   bugs,   and   the  latest  version  of  this  page,  can  be  found  at
       http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.