The following program explicitly loads a dynamic library at runtime, using the function dlopen(). It searches for the address of the dynfunc() function defined in the library and calls this function.
This is the dynamic program progdyn2.c:
#include <chorus.h> #include <cx/dlfcn.h> int main() { void (*funcptr)(); /* pointer to function to search */ void *handle; /* handle to the dynamic library */ /* finding the library */ handle = dlopen ("libdyn2.so", RTLD_NOW); if !(handle) { printf ("Cannot find library libdyn2.so\n"); exit(1); } /* finding the function in the library */ funcptr = (void (*)()) dlsym (handle, "dynfunc"); if !(funcptr) { printf ("Cannot find function dynfunc\n"); exit(1); } /* calling library function */ (*funcptr)(); }
This is the dynamic library libdyn2.c:
#include <chorus.h> void dynfunc() { printf ("Calling dynfunc\n"); }
The program and library above are built in the same way as in the previous example, using two Imakefiles:
Create a directory libdyn2dir in $WORK, containing libdyn2.c and the following Imakefile:
SRCS = libdyn2.c DynamicLibraryTarget (libdyn2.so, libdyn2.o, , , , ) DependTarget(libdyn2.c)
Create a directory progdyn2dir in $WORK, containing progdyn2.c and the following Imakefile:
SRCS = progdyn2.c DynamicUserTarget (progdyn2, progdyn2.o, , , , ) Depend(progdyn2.c)
Copy the dynamic program into the /bin subdirectory of the chorus_root_directory directory:
% cp $WORK/progdyn2dir/progdyn2 chorus_root_directory/bin |
Copy the dynamic library into the /lib subdirectory of the chorus_root_directory directory:
% cp $WORK/libdyn2dir/libdyn2.so chorus_root_directory/lib |
Then, the following command will tell the runtime linker where to find the libdyn2.so dynamic library:
% rsh jericho setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH /lib |
Finally, the following command will start the program:
% rsh jericho arun /bin/progdyn2 |
At program start-up, the runtime linker will only load the executable progdyn2. The libdyn2.so library will be loaded when the dlopen() function is called.