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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-06-12 03:50:40 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-06-12 03:50:40 +0000
commitfc53809803cd2bc2434e312b19a18fa36776da12 (patch)
treeb4b43bd6538f51965ce32856e9c053d0f90919c8 /docs/ELF_DLOPEN_METADATA.md
parentAdding upstream version 255.5. (diff)
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Adding upstream version 256.upstream/256
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+---
+title: Dlopen Metadata for ELF Files
+category: Interfaces
+layout: default
+SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later
+---
+
+# `dlopen()` Metadata for ELF Files
+
+*Intended audience: hackers working on packaging ELF files that use dlopen to load libraries.*
+
+## Motivation
+
+Using `dlopen()` to load optional dependencies brings several advantages: programs can gracefully downgrade
+a feature when a library is not available, and the shared library is only loaded into the process (and its
+ELF constructors are run) only when the requested feature is actually used. But it also has some drawbacks,
+and the main one is that it is harder to track a program's dependencies, since unlike build-time dynamic
+linking there will not be a mention in the ELF metadata. This specification aims to solve this problem by
+providing a standardized specification for a custom ELF note that can be used to list `dlopen()`
+dependencies.
+
+## Implementation
+
+This document will attempt to define a common metadata format specification, so that multiple implementers
+might use it when coding upstream software, and packagers might use it when building packages and setting
+dependencies.
+
+The metadata will be embedded in a series of new, 4-byte-aligned, allocated, 0-padded, read-only ELF header
+sections, in a JSON array containing name-value objects, either one ELF note per dependency or as a single
+note listing multiple dependencies in the top-level array. Implementers working on parsing ELF files should
+not assume a specific list of names, but parse anything that is included in the section, and should look for
+the note using the `note type`. Implementers working on build tools should strive to use the same names, for
+consistency. The most common will be listed here.
+
+* Section header
+
+```
+SECTION: `.note.dlopen`
+note type: `0x407c0c0a`
+Owner: `FDO` (FreeDesktop.org)
+Value: an array of JSON objects encoded as a zero-terminated UTF-8 string
+```
+
+* JSON payload
+
+```json
+[
+ {
+ "soname": ["libfoo.so.1"],
+ "feature": "foo",
+ "description": "Enables the foo feature",
+ "priority": "recommended"
+ }
+]
+```
+
+The format is a single JSON array containing objects, encoded as a zero-terminated `UTF-8` string. Each key
+in each object shall be unique as per recommendations of [RFC8259](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8259#section-4).
+Strings shall not contain any control characters or use `\uXXX` escaping.
+
+Reference implementations of [packaging tools for `.deb` and `.rpm`](https://github.com/systemd/package-notes)
+are available, and provide macros/helpers to parse the note when building packages and adding dependencies.
+
+## Well-known keys
+
+The metadata format is intentionally extensible, so that upstreams and later revisions of this spec can add
+their own information. The 'soname' array is required, with at least one element, everything else is
+optional. If alternative soname versions for the same library are supported at the same time, an array can
+be used, listing the most preferred first, and parsers are expected to select only the first one that is
+available on the system, as it is a mechanism to specify alternatives. If the `priority` field is used, it
+must follow the specification and use one of the values specified in the table. If it is not specified, a
+parser should assume 'recommended' if a priority is needed. If the `feature` field is used, it will identify
+an individual feature, and multiple entries using the same `feature` denote functionality that requires all
+of the libraries they specify in order to be enabled.
+
+| Key name | Key type | Mandatory | Key description | Example value |
+|-------------|----------------------------|-----------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------------------|
+| soname | array of strings | yes | The library names loaded by `dlopen()` | [ "libfoo.so.1", "libfoo.so.0" ] |
+| feature | string | no | A keyword identifying the feature that the library contributes to enable | "foo" |
+| description | string | no | A human-readable text string describing the feature | "Enables the foo feature" |
+| priority | string | no | The priority of the feature, one of: required, recommended, suggested | "recommended" |
+
+### Priority definition
+
+| Priority | Semantics |
+|-------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
+| required | Core functionality needs the dependency, the binary will not work if it cannot be found |
+| recommended | Important functionality needs the dependency, the binary will work but in most cases the dependency should be provided |
+| suggested | Secondary functionality needs the dependency, the binary will work and the dependency is only needed for full-featured installations |