A Dynamic Link Library (DLL) contains an executable code that can be shared by many processes in a system at any one time. A program can link against a DLL at compile time, meaning that the linker will match the DLL's symbols (such as function names and variables) with references from the program and ascertain the address within the DLL of the functions or variables.
Alternatively a program can dynamically load a DLL into memory during execution, locate the address of a symbol, use it and then unload the DLL. Traditionally and for greater memory efficiency, the Symbian platform links by ordinal, whereas Unix-like operating systems link by name. The following sections provide example code to illustrate how the DLL loader works with each operating system.
The Symbian platform v9.3 kernel supports all functionalities
of P.I.P.S. libraries - referred to as "P.I.P.S.- ready". Pre v9.3 the kernel
only supports the Symbian platform- standard ordinal lookup in DLLs; it does
not support symbolic lookup. Thus the function dlsym()
cannot
be used with a symbolic name. To overcome this restriction, pass the function's
ordinal number as symbol parameter refer the library's list of exports (the
DEF file) for the function's ordinal number. For example, instead of: dlsym(&handle,
"foo")
use dlsym (&handle, "3")
where the function foo()
has
ordinal 3.
The following code shows how
a shared library is dynamically loaded and used in a Unix-like environment
using the dl
interface.
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { //Handle void* dll_handle; //Function prototype void (*printSum)(int a, int b); //Error message const char* errorMsg; //Filename of dll to load char dllFileName[] = "/root/PortDoc/Example6/dll/shareddll"; //Load the dll dll_handle = dlopen(dllFileName, RTLD_LAZY); if (!dll_handle) { fprintf(stderr, "Error during load of library: %s\n", dlerror()); return EXIT_FAILURE; } //Find the symbol printSum = dlsym(dll_handle, "printSum"); //Get the error message errorMsg = dlerror(); if (errorMsg) { fprintf(stderr, "Error during symbol lookup: %s\n", errorMsg); return EXIT_FAILURE; } //Now call the function printSum(4, 6); //Dispose of the DLL dlclose(dll_handle); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
As an example, the shareddll
might have a
function such as:
void printSum(int a, int b) { printf("Result is : %d\n", a + b); }
Symbian platform programs uses the function or variable's ordinal position within a DLL to link with DLLs. For example, implementing a shared DLL on the Symbian platform could look like this:
EXPORT_C void printSum(int a, int b) { printf("Result is : %d\n", a + b); }
Compiling this will generate a .def
file,
which contains the ordinals of each symbol in the DLL. For instance:
EXPORTS printSum @ 1 NONAME
Here, the .def
shows
that the ordinal for the printSum()
function is 1.
The
following code shows how the main()
function is changed in
P.I.P.S..
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { //Handle void* dll_handle; //Function prototype void (*printSum)(int a, int b); //Error message const char* errorMsg; //Filename of dll to load char dllFileName[] = "/root/PortDoc/Example6/dll/shareddll"; //Load the dll dll_handle = dlopen(dllFileName, RTLD_LAZY); if (!dll_handle) { fprintf(stderr, "Error during load of library: %s\n", dlerror()); return EXIT_FAILURE; } //Find the symbol, using the ordinal printSum = dlsym(dll_handle, "1"); //Get the error message errorMsg = dlerror(); if (errorMsg) { fprintf(stderr, "Error during symbol lookup: %s\n", errorMsg); return EXIT_FAILURE; } //Now call the function printSum(4, 6); //Dispose of the DLL dlclose(dll_handle); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
Note that for the Symbian library loader, the mode parameter
for the dlopen() function is irrelevant and the library
will be loaded immediately. So although RTLD_LAZY
is the
mode parameter in the example, it will behave just as RTLD_NOW
.
Also note that there is no facility to call any library constructor and destructor
functions using __attribute((constructor))
or __attribute((destructor))
.
P.I.P.S. provides APIs from libdl to support dynamic lookup by name, which is used in Unix-like platforms, instead of the native Symbian platform lookup by ordinal mechanism. Lookup by name is possible thanks to the new libdl, which in turn uses the existing RLibrary functions to load and unload DLLs.
A symbol name lookup version of the dlsym()
function is provided, similar to UNIX®, which does not need any special treatment
(the example shown in the Using Shared libraries in a Unix-like environment section
will suffice). However, it is still necessary to generate the .def
file
for the DLL. The following sections provides a brief summary of the functionality
provided by libdl
.
The libdl
APIs,
which support dynamic lookup by name, are described in the following table:
libdl API |
Description |
void *dlopen (const char *path, int mode) |
Call dlopen() to gain access to symbols of any
shared library or DLL. If dlopen() fails for any reason,
it will return a NULL. The default search path for the library can be provided
in the environment variable |
void *dlsym(void *handle, const char *symbol) |
The dlsym() function returns the address binding of the symbol described in the null-terminated character string 'symbol', as it occurs in the shared object identified by 'handle'. |
int dlclose(void *handle) |
Call dlclose() with a valid dlopen-ed handle to remove it from the cache list maintained by dlopen(). If it fails, dlclose() will return -1; otherwise, it will return 0. |
char *dlerror(void) |
Call dlerror() to obtain the most recent error that occurred due to any of the dl routines, that is, dlopen(), dlsym(), or dlclose(). |