The dynamic token $ISALIST is expanded at runtime to reflect the native instruction sets executable on this platform, as displayed by the utility isalist(1).
Any string name that incorporates the $ISALIST token is effectively duplicated into multiple strings. Each string is assigned one of the available instruction sets. This token is only available for filter or runpath specifications.
The following example shows how the auxiliary filter libfoo.so.1 can be designed to access an instruction set specific filtee libbar.so.1.
$ LD_OPTIONS='-f /opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST/libbar.so.1' \ cc -o libfoo.so.1 -G -K pic -h libfoo.so.1 -R. foo.c $ dump -Lv libfoo.so.1 | egrep "SONAME|AUXILIARY" [1] SONAME libfoo.so.1 [2] AUXILIARY /opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST/libbar.so.1 |
Or alternatively the runpath can be used.
$ LD_OPTIONS='-f libbar.so.1' \ cc -o libfoo.so.1 -G -K pic -h libfoo.so.1 -R'/ot/ISV/lib/$ISALIST' foo.c $ dump -Lv libfoo.so.1 | egrep "RUNPATH|AUXILIARY" [1] RUNPATH /opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST [2] AUXILIARY libbar.so.1 |
In either case the runtime linker uses the platform available instruction list to construct multiple search paths. For example, the following application has a dependency on libfoo.so.1 and is executed on a SUNW,Ultra-2:
$ ldd -ls prog ..... find object=libbar.so.1; required by ./libfoo.so.1 search path=/opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST (RPATH from file ./libfoo.so.1) trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv9+vis/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv9/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv8plus+vis/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv8plus/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv8/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv8-fsmuld/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv7/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparc/libbar.so.1 |
Or an application with similar dependencies is executed on an MMX configured Pentium Pro:
$ ldd -ls prog ..... find object=libbar.so.1; required by ./libfoo.so.1 search path=/opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST (RPATH from file ./libfoo.so.1) trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/pentium_pro+mmx/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/pentium_pro/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/pentium+mmx/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/pentium/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/i486/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/i386/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/i86/libbar.so.1 |
The use of $ISALIST within an auxiliary filter enables one or more filtees to provide alternative implementations of interfaces defined within the filter.
Any interface defined in a filter that does not have an alternative implementation defined in a filtee results in an exhaustive search of all potential filtees in an attempt to locate the required interface. If filtees are being employed to provide performance critical functions, this exhaustive filtee searching can be counterproductive.
A filtee can be built with the link-editor's -z endfiltee option to indicate that it is the last of the available filtees. This option terminates any further filtee searching for that filter. For example, from the previous SPARC example, if the sparcv9 filtee existed, and was tagged with -z endfiltee, the filtee searches would be:
$ ldd -ls prog ..... find object=libbar.so.1; required by ./libfoo.so.1 search path=/opt/ISV/lib/$ISALIST (RPATH from file ./libfoo.so.1) trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv9+vis/libbar.so.1 trying path=/opt/ISV/lib/sparcv9/libbar.so.1 |