As Ross Ridge suggested in the comments, /proc/self/maps
can help you with this.
Each line looks something like this:
35b1a1f000-35b1a20000 r--p 0001f000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so
START ADDR- END ADDR PERM OFFSET DEV INODE PATHNAME
All we care about are the start and end addresses, so this doesn't take much code:
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int is_mmaped(void *ptr, size_t length) {
FILE *file = fopen("/proc/self/maps", "r");
char line[1024];
int result = 0;
while (!feof(file)) {
if (fgets(line, sizeof(line) / sizeof(char), file) == NULL) {
break;
}
unsigned long start, end;
if (sscanf(line, "%lx-%lx", &start, &end) != 2) {
continue; // could not parse. fail gracefully and try again on the next line.
}
unsigned long ptri = (long) ptr;
if (ptri >= start && ptri + length <= end) {
result = 1;
break;
}
}
fclose(file);
return result;
}
And some tests:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
void *test = mmap(NULL, 16384, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 16384));
printf("F %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 16385));
printf("F %d\n", is_mmaped(test + 1, 16384));
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 1024));
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 256));
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 8));
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(test + 16383, 1));
munmap(test, 16384);
printf("F %d\n", is_mmaped(test, 16384));
printf("T %d\n", is_mmaped(main, 32));
return 0;
}
which prints:
T 1
F 0
F 0
T 1
T 1
T 1
T 1
F 0
T 1
as expected.
/proc/self/maps
? It's a documented interface on Linux.