GETAUXVAL(3) manual page
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getauxval - retrieve a value from the auxiliary
vector
#include <sys/auxv.h>
unsigned long getauxval(unsigned long type);
The getauxval()
function retrieves values from the auxiliary vector, a mechanism that the
kernel’s ELF binary loader uses to pass certain information to user space
when a program is executed.
Each entry in the auxiliary vector consists
of a pair of values: a type that identifies what this entry represents,
and a value for that type. Given the argument type, getauxval() returns
the corresponding value.
The value returned for each type is given in the
following list. Not all type values are present on all architectures.
- AT_BASE
- The base address of the program interpreter (usually, the dynamic linker).
- AT_BASE_PLATFORM
- A string identifying the real platform; may differ from
AT_PLATFORM (PowerPC only).
- AT_CLKTCK
- The frequency with which times(2)
counts. This value can also be obtained via sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK).
- AT_DCACHEBSIZE
- The data cache block size.
- AT_EGID
- The effective group ID of the thread.
- AT_ENTRY
- The entry address of the executable.
- AT_EUID
- The effective user
ID of the thread.
- AT_EXECFD
- File descriptor of program.
- AT_EXECFN
- Pathname
used to execute program.
- AT_FLAGS
- Flags (unused).
- AT_FPUCW
- Used FPU control
word (SuperH architecture only). This gives some information about the FPU
initialization performed by the kernel.
- AT_GID
- The real group ID of the
thread.
- AT_HWCAP
- A pointer to a multibyte mask of bits whose settings indicate
detailed processor capabilities. The contents of the bit mask are hardware
dependent (for example, see the kernel source file arch/x86/include/asm/cpufeature.h
for details relating to the Intel x86 architecture). A human-readable version
of the same information is available via /proc/cpuinfo.
- AT_ICACHEBSIZE
- The
instruction cache block size.
- AT_PAGESZ
- The system page size (the
same value returned by sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE)).
- AT_PHDR
- The address of the
program headers of the executable.
- AT_PHENT
- The size of program header entry.
- AT_PHNUM
- The number of program headers.
- AT_PLATFORM
- A pointer to a string
that identifies the hardware platform that the program is running on. The
dynamic linker uses this in the interpretation of rpath values.
- AT_RANDOM
- The address of sixteen bytes containing a random value.
- AT_SECURE
- Has a
nonzero value if this executable should be treated securely. Most commonly,
a nonzero value indicates that the process is executing a set-user-ID or
set-group-ID program; alternatively, a nonzero value may be triggered by
a Linux Security Module. When this value is nonzero, the dynamic linker
disables the use of certain environment variables (see ld-linux.so(8)
) and
glibc changes other aspects of its behavior. (See also secure_getenv(3)
.)
- AT_SYSINFO
- The entry point to the system call function in the vDSO. Not
present/needed on all architectures (e.g., absent on x86-64).
- AT_SYSINFO_EHDR
- The address of a page containing the virtual Dynamic Shared Object (vDSO)
that the kernel creates in order to provide fast implementations of certain
system calls.
- AT_UCACHEBSIZE
- The unified cache block size.
- AT_UID
- The real
user ID of the thread.
On success, getauxval() returns the value
corresponding to type. If type is not found, 0 is returned.
- ENOENT
(since glibc 2.19)
- No entry corresponding to type could be found in the
auxiliary vector.
The getauxval() function was added to glibc in
version 2.16.
The getauxval() function
is thread-safe.
This function is a nonstandard glibc extension.
The primary consumer of the information in the auxiliary vector is
the dynamic linker ld-linux.so(8)
. The auxiliary vector is a convenient and
efficient shortcut that allows the kernel to communicate a certain set
of standard information that the dynamic linker usually or always needs.
In some cases, the same information could be obtained by system calls,
but using the auxiliary vector is cheaper.
The auxiliary vector resides
just above the argument list and environment in the process address space.
The auxiliary vector supplied to a program can be viewed by setting the
LD_SHOW_AUXV environment variable when running a program:
$ LD_SHOW_AUXV=1
sleep 1
The auxiliary vector of any process can (subject to file permissions)
be obtained via /proc/PID/auxv; see proc(5)
for more information.
Before
the addition of the ENOENT error in glibc 2.19, there was no way to unambiguously
distinguish the case where type could not be found from the case where
the value corresponding to type was zer0.
secure_getenv(3)
, vdso(7)
,
ld-linux.so(8)
This page is part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages
project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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