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common/src/03-May-2024-7118

README.CRT.TXTD03-May-202410.8 KiB275189

README.CRT.TXT

1 This directory contains the sources of the C runtime object files
2 required by the Android NDK toolchains. This document explains
3 what they are, as well as a few important details about them.
4 
5 The files are located under the following directories:
6 
7   android-3/arch-arm/src/
8   android-9/arch-x86/src/
9   android-9/arch-mips/src/
10 
11 They are either C files, or assembly files with an .S extension, which means
12 that they'll be sent to the C-preprocessor before being assembled into
13 object files. They have the following names and usage:
14 
15   crtbegin_static.[cS]
16     This file contains a tiny ELF startup entry point (named '_start')
17     that is linked into every Android _static_ executable. These binaries can
18     run on any Linux system, but cannot perform dynamic linking at all.
19 
20     Note that the kernel calls the '_start' entry point directly when it
21     launches such an executable. The _start stub is used to call the
22     C library's runtime initialization, passing it the address of the
23     'main' function.
24 
25   crtbegin_dynamic.[cS]
26     This is equivalent to crtbegin_static.[cS] but for _dynamic_ executables.
27     These executables always link to the system C library dynamically.
28 
29     When the kernel launches such an executable, it actually starts the
30     dynamic linker (/system/bin/linker), which loads and relocates the
31     executable (possibly loading any dependent system libraries as well),
32     then call the _start stub.
33 
34   crtbegin_so.[cS]
35     This is equivalent to crtbegin_dynamic.[cS], but shall be used for
36     shared libraries. One major difference is that there is no _start
37     entry point.
38 
39   crtend_android.S
40     This source file shall be used when generating an executable, i.e. used
41     in association with either crtbegin_static.[cS] or crtbegin_dynamic.[cS]
42 
43   crtend.S
44     This source file is _strictly_ equivalent to crtend_android.S.
45     Actually, it *must* be compiled into an object named 'crtend_android.o'
46     because that's the hard-coded name that the toolchain binaries expect.
47 
48     (the naming difference for this source file is purely historical, it
49     could probably be removed in the future).
50 
51   crtend_so.S
52     This source's object file shall be used when generating a shared library,
53     i.e. used in association with crtbegin_so.[cS] only.
54 
55 Content of these files:
56 
57 ELF section (lists);
58 
59   crtbegin_static.[cS] and crtbegin_dynamic.[cS] contain a '_start' entry point
60   for the corresponding executable. crtbegin_so.[cS] doesn't need any.
61 
62   all crtbegin_XXX.[cS] files contain the head of various ELF sections, which are
63   used to list of ELF constructors and destructors. The sections are:
64 
65     .init_array:
66         Contains a list of function addresses that are run at load time.
67         This means they are run *before* 'main', in the case of executables,
68         or during 'dlopen()' for shared libraries (either implicit or explicit).
69 
70         The functions are called in list order (from first to last).
71 
72     .fini_array:
73         Contains a list of destructor addresses that are run at unload time.
74         This means they are run *after* 'exit', in the case of executables,
75         or during 'dlclose()' for shared libraries (either implicit or explicit).
76 
77         The functions are called in _reverse_ list order (from last to first).
78 
79     .preinit_array:
80         This section can *only* appear in executables. It contains a list of
81         constructors that are run _before_ the ones in .init_array, or those
82         of any dependent shared library (if any).
83 
84     .ctors
85         This section shall *not* be used on Android. Used on some GLibc-based
86         Linux systems to hold list of constructors. The toolchains should
87         place all constructors in .init_array instead.
88 
89     .dtors
90         This section shall *not* be used on Android. Used on some GLibc-based
91         Linux systems to hold a list of destructors. The toolchains should
92         place all destructors in .fini_array instead.
93 
94 
95 __dso_handle symbol:
96 
97   To properly support the C++ ABI, a unique *local* *hidden* symbol named
98   '__dso_handle' must be defined in each shared library.
99 
100   This is used to implement static C++ object initialization in a shared
101   library, as in:
102 
103       static Foo  foo(10);
104 
105   The statement above creates a hidden function, which address will be added
106   to the .init_array section described above. Its compiler-generated code
107   will perform the object construction, and also register static destructor
108   using a call that looks like:
109 
110       __cxa_atexit( Foo::~Foo, &foo, &__dso_handle );
111 
112   Where '__cxa_atexit' is a special C++ support function provided by the
113   C library. Doing this ensures that the destructor for 'foo' will be
114   automatically called when the shared library containing this code is
115   unloaded (i.e. either through 'dlclose' or at program exit).
116 
117   The value of __dso_handle is normally never taken directly.
118 
119   See http://sourcery.mentor.com/public/cxx-abi/abi.html#dso-dtor
120 
121   WARNING: There is a big caveat regarding this symbol. Read the section
122            named 'IMPORTANT BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY ISSUES' below.
123 
124 
125 atexit() implementation:
126 
127   The Posix standard doesn't mandate the program behaviour's when a shared
128   library which registered a function with 'atexit' is unloaded explicitely
129   (e.g. with 'dlclose()').
130 
131   On most BSD systems (including OS X), unloading the library succeeds, but
132   the program will crash when it calls exit() or returns from main().
133 
134   On Linux, GLibc provides an implementation that automatically unregisters
135   such atexit() handlers when the corresponding shared library is unloaded.
136 
137   However, this requires that the atexit() implementation be part of the
138   shared library itself, rather than the C library.
139 
140   The crtbegin_dynamic.[cS] and crtbegin_so.[cS] files contain an tiny
141   implementation of atexit() in assembler that essentially does:
142 
143       void atexit(void(*myfunc)(void))
144       {
145          __cxa_atexit(myfunc, NULL, &__dso_handle);
146       }
147 
148   Because it references the shared library's hidden __dso_handle symbol,
149   this code cannot be in the C library itself.
150 
151   Note that crtbegin_static.[cS] should *not* provide an atexit() function
152   (the latter should be provided by libc.a instead).
153 
154   See 'BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY ISSUES' section below.
155 
156 
157 
158 BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY ISSUES:
159 -------------------------------
160 
161 To maintain binary compatibility to all existing NDK-generated machine code,
162 the system's C library (i.e. /system/lib/libc.so) needs to exports symbols
163 that shall *not* be exported by the NDK-provided link-time libraries (i.e.
164 $NDK/platforms/android-$LEVEL/arch-$ARCH/usr/lib/libc.so).
165 
166 Starting from NDK r7, the NDK libc.so is itself generated by a script
167 (gen-platforms.sh) from a list of symbol files (see libc.so.functions.txt
168 and libc.so.variables.txt) and does not contain any implementation code.
169 
170 The NDK libc.a, on the other hand, is a copy of a given version of the system
171 C static library, and shall only be used to generate static executables (it
172 is also required to build gdbserver).
173 
174 1. libgcc compatibility symbols:
175 
176   None of the link-time NDK shared libraries should export any libgcc symbol.
177 
178   However, on ARM, the system C library needs to export some of them to
179   maintain binary compatibility with 'legacy' NDK machine code. Details are
180   under bionic/libc/arch-arm/bionic/libgcc_compat.c.
181 
182   Note that gen-platforms.sh takes care of this by explicitely removing any
183   libgcc symbol from the link-time shared libraries it generates. This is done
184   by using the lists under:
185 
186      $NDK/build/tools/unwanted-symbols/$ARCH/libgcc.a.functions.txt
187 
188   You will need to update these files when the toolchain changes.
189 
190   Note that all libgcc releases should be backwards-compatible, i.e. newer
191   releases always contain all the symbols from previous ones).
192 
193 
194 2. __dso_handle compatibility symbol:
195 
196   Earlier versions of the C library exported a __dso_handle symbol
197   *incorrectly*. As such:
198 
199    - the system's libc.so shall always export its __dso_handle, as *global*
200      and *public* (in ELF visibility terms). A weak symbol definition is ok
201      but not necessary. This is only to ensure binary compatibility with
202     'legacy' NDK machine code.
203 
204    - the NDK link-time libc.so shall *never* export or contain any
205      __dso_handle symbol.
206 
207    - The NDK's crtbegin_dynamic.[cS] and crtbegin_so.[cS] shall provide a *local*
208      and *hidden* __dso_handle symbol.
209 
210    - The NDK's libc.a will containg a *global* and *public* __dso_handle, since
211      it is a copy of a release-specific system libc.so.
212 
213    - crtbegin_static.[cS] shall not provide any __dso_handle symbol, since static
214      executables will use the one in libc.a instead.
215 
216 Note that existing NDK machine code that links against the system libc's
217 __dso_handle will not have their C++ destructors run correctly when the
218 library is unloaded. However, this bug can be solved by simply recompiling
219 /relinking against a newer NDK release, without touching the original
220 sources.
221 
222 
223 
224 3. atexit compatibility symbol:
225 
226   Earlier versions of the C library implemented and exported an atexit()
227   function. While this is compliant with Posix, this doesn't allow a useful
228   GLibc extension which automatically un-registers atexit() handlers when
229   a shared library is unloaded with dlclose().
230 
231   To support this, while providing binary compatibility, the following
232   must apply:
233 
234   - The platform's /system/lib/libc.so should *always* export a working
235     atexit() implementation (used by 'legacy' NDK machine code).
236 
237   - The NDK link-time libc.so should *never* export atexit()
238 
239   - crtbegin_dynamic.[cS] and crtbegin_so.[cS] shall define a *local* *hidden*
240     symbol for atexit(), with a tiny implementation that amounts to the
241     following code:
242 
243          void atexit( void(*handler)(void) )
244          {
245             __cxa_atexit( handler, NULL, &__dso_handle );
246          }
247 
248   - The NDK libc.a shall provide an atexit() implementation, and
249     crtbegin_static.[cS] shall *not* provide one to avoid conflicts.
250 
251 Note that existing NDK machine code that links against the system libc's
252 atexit symbol will not have their atexit-handler automatically unregistered
253 when the library is unloaded. However, this bug can be solved by simply
254 recompiling/relinking against a newer NDK release, without touching the
255 original sources.
256 
257 4. __atomic_xxx sompatibility symbols:
258 
259 This issues is detailed in ndk/docs/ANDROID-ATOMICS.html and
260 bionic/libc/arch-arm/bionic/atomics_arm.c. In a nutshell:
261 
262    - The system C library *shall* always export on *ARM* the __atomic_cmpxchg,
263      __atomic_inc and __atomic_dec functions to support legacy NDK machine code.
264      Their implementation should have full (i.e. acquire+release) memory ordering
265      semantics.
266 
267    - The system C library for other CPU architectures (e.g. x86 or mips) *shall*
268      *not* export any of these symbols.
269 
270    - The NDK libc.so *shall* *not* export these symbols at all.
271 
272    - The NDK <sys/atomics.h> header shall provide inlined-static versions of
273      these functions that use the built-in GCC atomic functions instead.
274 
275