Implementing NULL trapping on AT&T SVR3.2(.2)

Piercarlo Grandi pcg at cs.aber.ac.uk
Mon Jul 9 21:48:16 AEST 1990


In article I, <PCG.90Jul7172536 at odin.cs.aber.ac.uk> pcg at cs.aber.ac.uk
(Piercarlo Grandi), write:

      In article <1990Jul5.174608.17336 at eci386.uucp> clewis at eci386.UUCP
      (Chris Lewis) writes:

      On System V (I'm 386/ix 1.0.6), the memory layout of an executable

By the way: take advantage of ISC's *generous* upgrade policy and get up
to 2.x, which is vastly improved, or get (for probably much less than
the upgrade cost) ESIX rev. D, which apparently has the Berkeley FFS, as
well as RFS, TCP/IP, X11, etc...

      program is controlled by a default loader control file ("ifile"),
      ...
      386 one uses the "defaults" built into "ld"'s binary, which I can't
      seem to be able to reconstruct from the 386/ix Guide entries for
      the loader.

	[ ... ]

   I had posted some months ago a full set of patches to g++ 1.36.x that
   contained this ifile, and the ifile itself separately. If any kind soul
   has saved, they might want to repost it (should go in the frequently
   asked questions writeup) or send it to Chris Lewis (my copy is on my
   home machine, i.e. not handy here).

Well, given my infinite generosity I have myself brought over from home
the ifile concerned, embellished it a bit, and here it is:

-----------------------cut here-----------------------------------
/*
    Copyright 1989,1990 Piercarlo Grandi. All rights reserved.

    This source is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
    modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
    published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or
    (at your option) any later version.

    This source is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
    GNU General Public License for more details.

    You may have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
    along with this source; if not, write to the Free Software
    Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/

/*
    This is a set of sysV 3.2 directives to assist with making the -z
    option of ld(1) work.  This options undefines a stretch of memory
    starting with virtual address 0, thus helping to catch stray
    memory references (tipically indirections thru the 0 pointer).

    Unfortunately -z only redefines the memory map; this script must
    be also used to ensure that the first section (.text) begins at
    the first valid virtual memory map location and that it begins in
    the executable file at a page boundary, so that demand loading is
    still possible.

    On a sysV/386 pages are 0x1000 or 4K bytes long, and segments are
    0x400000 or 4M bytes long.
*/

/*
    Just for curiosity, here are the directives that would set up the
    memory map appropriately (well, the stack is a bit bogus); if you
    use these, you can leave option -z out, but you get a limit on the
    number of supported shared libraries.  Note that -z starts coede
    at 0x00020000; my manipulating three values you can change that.

    Note that the address of the shared libraries after the 1st are
    a bit speculative, as is the origin and length of the stack.

    The kernel and uarea ranges are ther eonly if you want to do funny
    things; they could be easily left out. If you want to use them,
    you have to use a noload section.
*/

/*
MEMORY
{
	code	(RXI)		: origin=0x00020000,length=0x003e0000
	data	(RWXI)		: origin=0x00400000,length=0x00400000
	stack	(RWX)		: origin=0x40000000,length=0x40000000

	code1	(RX)		: origin=0xa0000000,length=0x00400000
	data1	(RX)		: origin=0xa0400000,length=0x00400000
	code2	(RX)		: origin=0xa0800000,length=0x00400000
	data2	(RX)		: origin=0xa0c00000,length=0x00400000
	code3	(RX)		: origin=0xa1000000,length=0x00400000
	data3	(RX)		: origin=0xa1400000,length=0x00400000
	code4	(RX)		: origin=0xa1800000,length=0x00400000
	data4	(RX)		: origin=0xa1c00000,length=0x00400000

	kernel	(RX)		: origin=0xd0010000,length=0x003f0000
	uarea	(R)		: origin=0xe0000000,length=0x00020000
}
*/

SECTIONS
{
    /*
	Ensure that text is the first section loaded. Note that we align the
	start of code to the first 4K bytes in the object file to make it
	possible to demand load it. We could have instead aligned it to the
	address immediately after the end of the COFF headers, but ld does not
	give us a primitive with the size of the COFF header. We therefore
	align code to a page boundary, and this incidentally leaves the first
	4K bytes free to the COFF headers. They should never even approach
	that size, so it is a bit of disk space waste, but demand loading
	is important, and also peace of mind that they do not overwrite the
	beginning of the code section.
    */

    .text	BIND(0x00020000)	/* -z starts virtual mem here	*/
		BLOCK(0x00001000):	/* Align text in file to page	*/
    {
	*(.init)
	*(.text)
	*(.fini)
    }

    /*
        Ensure that data and bss begin at the next region boundary
        (0x400000) and that it begins at an offset within the page
        that is the same as the offset of the end of the text region
        (note that we *know* that text begins on a page boundary
        here).  This may waste some bytes in the first page of the
        data+bss region, but allows it to overlap the text region in
        the page table, thus saving a lot of page table space.  See
        the relevant article in Unix Papers (SAMS).
    */

    GROUP	BIND(NEXT(0x00400000) + SIZEOF(.text)%0x1000):
    {
	.data			: { }
	.bss			: { }
    }
}
--
Piercarlo "Peter" Grandi           | ARPA: pcg%cs.aber.ac.uk at nsfnet-relay.ac.uk
Dept of CS, UCW Aberystwyth        | UUCP: ...!mcsun!ukc!aber-cs!pcg
Penglais, Aberystwyth SY23 3BZ, UK | INET: pcg at cs.aber.ac.uk



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