xref: /dragonfly/share/man/man5/a.out.5 (revision 0dace59e)
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31.\"	@(#)a.out.5	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/5/93
32.\" $FreeBSD: src/share/man/man5/a.out.5,v 1.10.2.4 2002/04/16 14:50:18 trhodes Exp $
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34.\"
35.Dd June 5, 1993
36.Dt A.OUT 5
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm a.out
40.Nd format of executable binary files
41.Sh SYNOPSIS
42.In a.out.h
43.Sh DESCRIPTION
44The include file
45.In a.out.h
46declares three structures and several macros.
47The structures describe the format of
48executable machine code files
49.Pq Sq binaries
50on the system.
51.Pp
52A binary file consists of up to 7 sections.
53In order, these sections are:
54.Bl -tag -width "text relocations"
55.It exec header
56Contains parameters used by the kernel
57to load a binary file into memory and execute it,
58and by the link editor
59.Xr ld 1
60to combine a binary file with other binary files.
61This section is the only mandatory one.
62.It text segment
63Contains machine code and related data
64that are loaded into memory when a program executes.
65May be loaded read-only.
66.It data segment
67Contains initialized data; always loaded into writable memory.
68.It text relocations
69Contains records used by the link editor
70to update pointers in the text segment when combining binary files.
71.It data relocations
72Like the text relocation section, but for data segment pointers.
73.It symbol table
74Contains records used by the link editor
75to cross reference the addresses of named variables and functions
76.Pq Sq symbols
77between binary files.
78.It string table
79Contains the character strings corresponding to the symbol names.
80.El
81.Pp
82Every binary file begins with an
83.Fa exec
84structure:
85.Bd -literal -offset indent
86struct exec {
87	unsigned long	a_midmag;
88	unsigned long	a_text;
89	unsigned long	a_data;
90	unsigned long	a_bss;
91	unsigned long	a_syms;
92	unsigned long	a_entry;
93	unsigned long	a_trsize;
94	unsigned long	a_drsize;
95};
96.Ed
97.Pp
98The fields have the following functions:
99.Bl -tag -width a_trsize
100.It Fa a_midmag
101This field is stored in host byte-order.
102It has a number of sub-components accessed by the macros
103.Fn N_GETFLAG ,
104.Fn N_GETMID ,
105and
106.Fn N_GETMAGIC ,
107and set by the macro
108.Fn N_SETMAGIC .
109.Pp
110The macro
111.Fn N_GETFLAG
112returns a few flags:
113.Bl -tag -width EX_DYNAMIC
114.It Dv EX_DYNAMIC
115indicates that the executable requires the services of the run-time link editor.
116.It Dv EX_PIC
117indicates that the object contains position independent code.
118This flag is
119set by
120.Xr as 1
121when given the
122.Sq -k
123flag and is preserved by
124.Xr ld 1
125if necessary.
126.El
127.Pp
128If both EX_DYNAMIC and EX_PIC are set, the object file is a position independent
129executable image (eg. a shared library), which is to be loaded into the
130process address space by the run-time link editor.
131.Pp
132The macro
133.Fn N_GETMID
134returns the machine-id.
135This indicates which machine(s) the binary is intended to run on.
136.Pp
137.Fn N_GETMAGIC
138specifies the magic number, which uniquely identifies binary files
139and distinguishes different loading conventions.
140The field must contain one of the following values:
141.Bl -tag -width ZMAGIC
142.It Dv OMAGIC
143The text and data segments immediately follow the header
144and are contiguous.
145The kernel loads both text and data segments into writable memory.
146.It Dv NMAGIC
147As with
148.Dv OMAGIC ,
149text and data segments immediately follow the header and are contiguous.
150However, the kernel loads the text into read-only memory
151and loads the data into writable memory at the next
152page boundary after the text.
153.It Dv ZMAGIC
154The kernel loads individual pages on demand from the binary.
155The header, text segment and data segment are all
156padded by the link editor to a multiple of the page size.
157Pages that the kernel loads from the text segment are read-only,
158while pages from the data segment are writable.
159.El
160.It Fa a_text
161Contains the size of the text segment in bytes.
162.It Fa a_data
163Contains the size of the data segment in bytes.
164.It Fa a_bss
165Contains the number of bytes in the
166.Sq bss segment
167and is used by the kernel to set the initial break
168.Pq Xr brk 2
169after the data segment.
170The kernel loads the program so that this amount of writable memory
171appears to follow the data segment and initially reads as zeroes.
172.Po
173.Em bss
174= block started by symbol
175.Pc
176.It Fa a_syms
177Contains the size in bytes of the symbol table section.
178.It Fa a_entry
179Contains the address in memory of the entry point
180of the program after the kernel has loaded it;
181the kernel starts the execution of the program
182from the machine instruction at this address.
183.It Fa a_trsize
184Contains the size in bytes of the text relocation table.
185.It Fa a_drsize
186Contains the size in bytes of the data relocation table.
187.El
188.Pp
189The
190.In a.out.h
191include file defines several macros which use an
192.Fa exec
193structure to test consistency or to locate section offsets in the binary file.
194.Bl -tag -width N_BADMAG(exec)
195.It Fn N_BADMAG exec
196Nonzero if the
197.Fa a_magic
198field does not contain a recognized value.
199.It Fn N_TXTOFF exec
200The byte offset in the binary file of the beginning of the text segment.
201.It Fn N_SYMOFF exec
202The byte offset of the beginning of the symbol table.
203.It Fn N_STROFF exec
204The byte offset of the beginning of the string table.
205.El
206.Pp
207Relocation records have a standard format which
208is described by the
209.Fa relocation_info
210structure:
211.Bd -literal -offset indent
212struct relocation_info {
213	int		r_address;
214	unsigned int	r_symbolnum : 24,
215			r_pcrel : 1,
216			r_length : 2,
217			r_extern : 1,
218			r_baserel : 1,
219			r_jmptable : 1,
220			r_relative : 1,
221			r_copy : 1;
222};
223.Ed
224.Pp
225The
226.Fa relocation_info
227fields are used as follows:
228.Bl -tag -width r_symbolnum
229.It Fa r_address
230Contains the byte offset of a pointer that needs to be link-edited.
231Text relocation offsets are reckoned from the start of the text segment,
232and data relocation offsets from the start of the data segment.
233The link editor adds the value that is already stored at this offset
234into the new value that it computes using this relocation record.
235.It Fa r_symbolnum
236Contains the ordinal number of a symbol structure
237in the symbol table (it is
238.Em not
239a byte offset).
240After the link editor resolves the absolute address for this symbol,
241it adds that address to the pointer that is undergoing relocation.
242(If the
243.Fa r_extern
244bit is clear, the situation is different; see below.)
245.It Fa r_pcrel
246If this is set,
247the link editor assumes that it is updating a pointer
248that is part of a machine code instruction using pc-relative addressing.
249The address of the relocated pointer is implicitly added
250to its value when the running program uses it.
251.It Fa r_length
252Contains the log base 2 of the length of the pointer in bytes;
2530 for 1-byte displacements, 1 for 2-byte displacements,
2542 for 4-byte displacements.
255.It Fa r_extern
256Set if this relocation requires an external reference;
257the link editor must use a symbol address to update the pointer.
258When the
259.Fa r_extern
260bit is clear, the relocation is
261.Sq local ;
262the link editor updates the pointer to reflect
263changes in the load addresses of the various segments,
264rather than changes in the value of a symbol (except when
265.Fa r_baserel
266is also set (see below).
267In this case, the content of the
268.Fa r_symbolnum
269field is an
270.Fa n_type
271value (see below);
272this type field tells the link editor
273what segment the relocated pointer points into.
274.It Fa r_baserel
275If set, the symbol, as identified by the
276.Fa r_symbolnum
277field, is to be relocated to an offset into the Global Offset Table.
278At run-time, the entry in the Global Offset Table at this offset is set to
279be the address of the symbol.
280.It Fa r_jmptable
281If set, the symbol, as identified by the
282.Fa r_symbolnum
283field, is to be relocated to an offset into the Procedure Linkage Table.
284.It Fa r_relative
285If set, this relocation is relative to the (run-time) load address of the
286image this object file is going to be a part of.
287This type of relocation
288only occurs in shared objects.
289.It Fa r_copy
290If set, this relocation record identifies a symbol whose contents should
291be copied to the location given in
292.Fa r_address .
293The copying is done by the run-time link-editor from a suitable data
294item in a shared object.
295.El
296.Pp
297Symbols map names to addresses (or more generally, strings to values).
298Since the link-editor adjusts addresses,
299a symbol's name must be used to stand for its address
300until an absolute value has been assigned.
301Symbols consist of a fixed-length record in the symbol table
302and a variable-length name in the string table.
303The symbol table is an array of
304.Fa nlist
305structures:
306.Bd -literal -offset indent
307struct nlist {
308	union {
309		char	*n_name;
310		long	n_strx;
311	} n_un;
312	unsigned char	n_type;
313	char		n_other;
314	short		n_desc;
315	unsigned long	n_value;
316};
317.Ed
318.Pp
319The fields are used as follows:
320.Bl -tag -width n_un.n_strx
321.It Fa n_un.n_strx
322Contains a byte offset into the string table
323for the name of this symbol.
324When a program accesses a symbol table with the
325.Xr nlist 3
326function,
327this field is replaced with the
328.Fa n_un.n_name
329field, which is a pointer to the string in memory.
330.It Fa n_type
331Used by the link editor to determine
332how to update the symbol's value.
333The
334.Fa n_type
335field is broken down into three sub-fields using bitmasks.
336The link editor treats symbols with the
337.Dv N_EXT
338type bit set as
339.Sq external
340symbols and permits references to them from other binary files.
341The
342.Dv N_TYPE
343mask selects bits of interest to the link editor:
344.Bl -tag -width N_TEXT
345.It Dv N_UNDF
346An undefined symbol.
347The link editor must locate an external symbol with the same name
348in another binary file to determine the absolute value of this symbol.
349As a special case, if the
350.Fa n_value
351field is nonzero and no binary file in the link-edit defines this symbol,
352the link-editor will resolve this symbol to an address
353in the bss segment,
354reserving an amount of bytes equal to
355.Fa n_value .
356If this symbol is undefined in more than one binary file
357and the binary files do not agree on the size,
358the link editor chooses the greatest size found across all binaries.
359.It Dv N_ABS
360An absolute symbol.
361The link editor does not update an absolute symbol.
362.It Dv N_TEXT
363A text symbol.
364This symbol's value is a text address and
365the link editor will update it when it merges binary files.
366.It Dv N_DATA
367A data symbol; similar to
368.Dv N_TEXT
369but for data addresses.
370The values for text and data symbols are not file offsets but
371addresses; to recover the file offsets, it is necessary
372to identify the loaded address of the beginning of the corresponding
373section and subtract it, then add the offset of the section.
374.It Dv N_BSS
375A bss symbol; like text or data symbols but
376has no corresponding offset in the binary file.
377.It Dv N_FN
378A filename symbol.
379The link editor inserts this symbol before
380the other symbols from a binary file when
381merging binary files.
382The name of the symbol is the filename given to the link editor,
383and its value is the first text address from that binary file.
384Filename symbols are not needed for link-editing or loading,
385but are useful for debuggers.
386.El
387.Pp
388The
389.Dv N_STAB
390mask selects bits of interest to symbolic debuggers
391such as
392.Xr gdb 1 ;
393the values are described in
394.Xr stab 5 .
395.It Fa n_other
396This field provides information on the nature of the symbol independent of
397the symbol's location in terms of segments as determined by the
398.Fa n_type
399field.
400Currently, the lower 4 bits of the
401.Fa n_other
402field hold one of two values:
403.Dv AUX_FUNC
404and
405.Dv AUX_OBJECT
406(see
407.In link.h
408for their definitions).
409.Dv AUX_FUNC
410associates the symbol with a callable function, while
411.Dv AUX_OBJECT
412associates the symbol with data, irrespective of their locations in
413either the text or the data segment.
414This field is intended to be used by
415.Xr ld 1
416for the construction of dynamic executables.
417.It Fa n_desc
418Reserved for use by debuggers; passed untouched by the link editor.
419Different debuggers use this field for different purposes.
420.It Fa n_value
421Contains the value of the symbol.
422For text, data and bss symbols, this is an address;
423for other symbols (such as debugger symbols),
424the value may be arbitrary.
425.El
426.Pp
427The string table consists of an
428.Em unsigned long
429length followed by null-terminated symbol strings.
430The length represents the size of the entire table in bytes,
431so its minimum value (or the offset of the first string)
432is always 4 on 32-bit machines.
433.Sh SEE ALSO
434.Xr as 1 ,
435.Xr gdb 1 ,
436.Xr ld 1 ,
437.Xr brk 2 ,
438.Xr execve 2 ,
439.Xr nlist 3 ,
440.Xr core 5 ,
441.Xr elf 5 ,
442.Xr link 5 ,
443.Xr stab 5
444.Sh HISTORY
445The
446.In a.out.h
447include file appeared in
448.At v7 .
449.Sh BUGS
450Since not all of the supported architectures use the
451.Fa a_midmag
452field,
453it can be difficult to determine what
454architecture a binary will execute on
455without examining its actual machine code.
456Even with a machine identifier,
457the byte order of the
458.Fa exec
459header is machine-dependent.
460