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Say library x.so has a global variable y which is being manipulated by a function(say fun1) in the library.

When a process p1 is loaded into RAM whose code is using function fun1 from library x.so, the library x.so will be loaded into RAM (if not already present) by ld.so and the function symbol gets resolved before the program starts executing.

Now where is this global variable created. Is it in process p1 ?

What happens when another process p2 also uses fun1 (which is making operations on y)?

2 Answers 2

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Processes will get their private copies of y and it will be replaced by a fresh copy when you call exec. It will reside in the library's data segment.

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  • So when ever ld.so sees that current program is using a function from a library, it creates a fresh copy of variables in library's data segment into the current process's own data segment? Also if there is an exec() call the whole ld.so symbol resolving starts with the new code?
    – tez
    Feb 27, 2014 at 14:44
  • The library's data segment is created straight away when the library is loaded. It is created in a similar fashion as your executable's globals (as a private copy-on write file-backed VM mapping). Unlike function symbols - symbols to data are resolved straight away. When exec is called your entire process VM is replaced with a fresh one and all libraries are remapped from scratch.
    – Sergey L.
    Feb 27, 2014 at 14:51
  • @SergeyL, if you do an exec() style call, conceptually the whole memory area of the process is duplicated, so the child gets a fresh copy. In practice, to make it efficient, the operating system just gives them access to a shared reado-only copy, and duplicates only on write (copy-on-write). No remapping involved.
    – vonbrand
    Feb 27, 2014 at 15:39
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    @vonbrand No, this is the behaviour for fork, exec replaces the process image with a new (normally different) one.
    – Sergey L.
    Feb 27, 2014 at 15:43
  • @SergeyL, you are totally right. Sorry for the confusion.
    – vonbrand
    Mar 2, 2014 at 5:01
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Each process creates its own instance of variable y when load library at startup before reaching main entry point.

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