[−][src]Crate findshlibs
findshlibs
Find the set of shared libraries currently loaded in this process with a cross platform API.
The API entry point is the TargetSharedLibrary
type and its
SharedLibrary::each
trait method implementation.
Example
Here is an example program that prints out each shared library that is loaded in the process and the addresses where each of its segments are mapped into memory.
extern crate findshlibs; use findshlibs::{Segment, SharedLibrary, TargetSharedLibrary}; fn main() { TargetSharedLibrary::each(|shlib| { println!("{}", shlib.name().to_string_lossy()); for seg in shlib.segments() { println!(" {}: segment {}", seg.actual_virtual_memory_address(shlib), seg.name()); } }); }
Supported OSes
These are the OSes that findshlibs
currently supports:
- Linux
- macOS
If a platform is not supported then a fallback implementation is used that
does nothing. To see if your platform does something at runtime the
TARGET_SUPPORTED
constant can be used.
Is your OS missing here? Send us a pull request!
Addresses
Shared libraries' addresses can be confusing. They are loaded somewhere in physical memory, but we generally don't care about physical memory addresses, because only the OS can see that address and in userspace we can only access memory through its virtual memory address. But even "virtual memory address" is ambiguous because it isn't clear whether this is the address before or after the loader maps the shared library into memory and performs relocation.
To clarify between these different kinds of addresses, we borrow some terminology from LUL:
SVMA ("Stated Virtual Memory Address"): this is an address of a symbol (etc) as it is stated in the symbol table, or other metadata, of an object. Such values are typically small and start from zero or thereabouts, unless the object has been prelinked.
AVMA ("Actual Virtual Memory Address"): this is the address of a symbol (etc) in a running process, that is, once the associated object has been mapped into a process. Such values are typically much larger than SVMAs, since objects can get mapped arbitrarily far along the address space.
"Bias": the difference between AVMA and SVMA for a given symbol (specifically, AVMA - SVMA). The bias is always an integral number of pages. Once we know the bias for a given object's text section (for example), we can compute the AVMAs of all of its text symbols by adding the bias to their SVMAs.
Modules
linux | Linux-specific implementation of the |
unsupported | The fallback implementation of the SharedLibrary trait that does nothing. |
Structs
Avma | Actual virtual memory address. |
Bias | Virtual memory bias. |
Svma | Stated virtual memory address. |
Enums
IterationControl | Control whether iteration over shared libraries should continue or stop. |
SharedLibraryId | Represents an ID for a shared library. |
Constants
TARGET_SUPPORTED | An indicator if this platform is supported. |
Traits
Segment | A mapped segment in a shared library. |
SharedLibrary | A trait representing a shared library that is loaded in this process. |
Type Definitions
TargetSharedLibrary | The |