Reputation: 361
Some Unix shared libraries provide an output when called from the command line as if they were executables. For example:
$ /lib/libc.so.6
GNU C Library stable release version 2.13, by Roland McGrath et al.
Copyright (C) 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.
There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Compiled by GNU CC version 4.5.2.
Compiled on a Linux 2.6.37 system on 2011-01-18.
[...]
In a shared library of my own written in C, how can I provide this output? I've executed now a library I just made and I get a segment fault.
Note: I asked this previously on Unix & Linux SE here.
Upvotes: 15
Views: 3454
Reputation: 7951
The below definition of main is responsible for printing the output you see. It is defined in csu/version.c of the source tree of glibc. I hope this helps.
#ifdef HAVE_ELF
/* This function is the entry point for the shared object.
Running the library as a program will get here. */
extern void __libc_main (void) __attribute__ ((noreturn));
void
__libc_main (void)
{
__libc_print_version ();
_exit (0);
}
#endif
Upvotes: 10