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find_elf 1 "2 July 2009"
NAME
find_elf - Locate ELF sharable objects and executables
SYNOPSIS
find_elf [-frs] path

DESCRIPTION
"OS-Net build tools" "find_elf" "" "find_elf" The find_elf command descends a directory hierarchy and produces one line of output on stdout for each ELF executable or sharable object found.

OPTIONS

The following options are supported:

4 -f Fast Mode. When reading directories, the file name and modes are used to eliminate files from consideration and speed up the search: Executables must have the execute bit set, and sharable objects must end with a .so extension. Files that do not meet these requirements are silently eliminated from consideration without further analysis.

4 -r Report file names as relative paths, relative to the given file or directory, instead of fully qualified.

4 -s Only report sharable objects.

OUTPUT

find_elf produces a series of PREFIX, OBJECT, and ALIAS lines, which collectively describe the ELF objects located. Whitespace is used within each line to delimit the various fields of information provided.

If the -r option is used to specify that file names be reported as relative paths, a PREFIX line is output to provide the base path from which the relative names should be interpreted. There can only be one PREFIX line, and it is output first, before any OBJECT or ALIAS lines.

PREFIX path
For each object found, an OBJECT line is produced to describe it:
OBJECT [32 | 64] [DYN | EXEC] [VERDEF | NOVERDEF] object-path
The first field provides the ELF class of the object, and will be either 32 or 64. The second field provides the type of object, either a sharable object (DYN) or executable (EXEC). The third field will be VERDEF if the object contains ELF version definitions, and NOVERDEF if the object is not versioned. The final field gives the path to the object.

Under Unix, a file can have multiple names. In the context of ELF objects, this often happens for one of two reasons:

Compilation symlinks, used to provide a non-versioned name for a sharable object.

Symlinks such as '32' and '64' used to provide alternative non-machine specific paths to objects.

When find_elf identifies an object via such an aliased name, it issues an ALIAS line mapping it to the main name for the object:
ALIAS object-path alias-path

EXAMPLES
Assume the following hierarchy of files exist under /usr/lib/foo:
% /bin/ls -alRF /usr/lib/foo
/usr/lib/foo:
total 111
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 7 Jul 16 17:35 ./
drwxr-xr-x 34 root root 42 Jul 16 17:34 ../
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root bin 1 Jul 16 17:34 32 -> ./
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root bin 5 Jul 16 17:34 64 -> amd64/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root bin 4 Jul 16 17:35 amd64/
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root bin 11 Jul 16 17:35 libfoo.so -> libfoo.so.1*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root bin 49132 Jul 16 17:35 libfoo.so.1*

/usr/lib/foo/amd64:
total 150
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4 Jul 16 17:35 ./
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 7 Jul 16 17:35 ../
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root bin 11 Jul 16 17:35 libfoo.so -> libfoo.so.1*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root bin 72536 Jul 16 17:35 libfoo.so.1*
This hierarchy contains compilation symlinks (libfoo.so) and path alias symlinks (32, 64), as discussed in OUTPUT. .p find_elf produces the following output for the above hierarchy:
% find_elf -rh /usr/lib/foo
PREFIX /usr/lib/foo
OBJECT 64 DYN VERDEF amd64/libfoo.so.1
ALIAS amd64/libfoo.so.1 64/libfoo.so
ALIAS amd64/libfoo.so.1 64/libfoo.so.1
ALIAS amd64/libfoo.so.1 amd64/libfoo.so
OBJECT 32 DYN VERDEF libfoo.so.1
ALIAS libfoo.so.1 32/libfoo.so
ALIAS libfoo.so.1 32/libfoo.so.1
ALIAS libfoo.so.1 libfoo.so

SEE ALSO
check_rtime (1), interface_check (1), interface_cmp (1), ld (1), ldd (1), elfdump (1), pvs (1).

.TZ LLM