Reading through my book Expert C Programming, I came across the chapter on function interpositioning and how it can lead to some serious hard to find bugs if done unintentionally.

The example given in the book is the following:

my_source.c

mktemp() { ... }

main() {
  mktemp();
  getwd();
}

libc

mktemp(){ ... }
getwd(){ ...; mktemp(); ... }

According to the book, what happens in main() is that mktemp() (a standard C library function) is interposed by the implementation in my_source.c. Although having main() call my implementation of mktemp() is intended behavior, having getwd() (another C library function) also call my implementation of mktemp() is not.

Apparently, this example was a real life bug that existed in SunOS 4.0.3's version of lpr. The book goes on to explain the fix was to add the keyword static to the definition of mktemp() in my_source.c; although changing the name altogether should have fixed this problem as well.

This chapter leaves me with some unresolved questions that I hope you guys could answer:

  1. Does GCC have a way to warn about function interposition? We certainly don't ever intend on this happening and I'd like to know about it if it does.
  2. Should our software group adopt the practice of putting the keyword static in front of all functions that we don't want to be exposed?
  3. Can interposition happen with functions introduced by static libraries?

Thanks for the help.

EDIT

I should note that my question is not just aimed at interposing over standard C library functions, but also functions contained in other libraries, perhaps 3rd party, perhaps ones created in-house. Essentially, I want to catch any instance of interpositioning regardless of where the interposed function resides.

link|improve this question

feedback

5 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

It sounds like what you want is for the tools to detect that there are name conflicts in fucntions - ie., you don't want your externally accessible function names form accidentally having the same name and therefore 'override' or hide functions with the same name in a library.

There was a recent SO question related to this problem: Linking Libraries with Duplicate Class Names using GCC

Using the --whole-archive option on all the libraries you link against may help (but as I mentioned in the answer over there, I really don't know how well this works or how easy it is to convince builds to apply the option to all libraries)

link|improve this answer
Thanks for the answer, looks like you got to double dip on that one! =) – SiegeX May 6 '10 at 19:35
feedback

This is really a linker issue.

When you compile a bunch of C source files the compiler will create an object file for each one. Each .o file will contain a list of the public functions in this module, plus a list of functions that are called by code in the module, but are not actually defined there i.e. functions that this module is expecting some library to provide.

When you link a bunch of .o files together to make an executable the linker must resolve all of these missing references. This is the point where interposing can happen. If there are unresolved references to a function called "mktemp" and several libraries provide a public function with that name, which version should it use? There's no easy answer to this and yes odd things can happen if the wrong one is chosen

So yes, it's a good idea in C to "static" everything unless you really do need to use it from other source files. In fact in many other languages this is the default behavior and you have to mark things "public" if you want them accessible from outside.

link|improve this answer
I wish I could choose two answers because this an excellent one. I choose the other because it actually provided a solution. I hope this +1 will suffice. – SiegeX May 7 '10 at 3:20
feedback

Purely formally, the interpositioning you describe is a straightforward violation of C language definition rules (ODR rule, in C++ parlance). Any decent compiler must either detect these situations, or provide options for detecting them. It is simply illegal to define more than one function with the same name in C language, regardless of where these functions are defined (Standard library, other user library etc.)

I understand that many platforms provide means to customize the [standard] library behavior by defining some standard functions as weak symbols. While this is indeed a useful feature, I believe the compilers must still provide the user with means to enforce the standard diagnostics (on per-function or per-library basis preferably).

So, again, you should not worry about interpositioning if you have no weak symbols in your libraries. If you do (or if you suspect that you do), you have to consult your compiler documentation to find out if it offers you with means to inspect the weak symbol resolution.

In GCC, for example, you can disable the weak symbol functionality by using -fno-weak, but this basically kills everything related to weak symbols, which is not always desirable.

link|improve this answer
1  
Since this is C,, every function you call must be declared in some header file. So yes in principle the compiler should be able to detect functions of yours that have the same name (and thus would interpose) ones in any of the libraries you're using, and this will catch most of these problems. However because all symbols in a C source file are public by default the potential for interposing is always there in C if the writers of the libraries were lax about using "static". In other words there can very easily be public functions in a library that do not appear in its header file. – joefis May 6 '10 at 17:39
2  
As long as the prototype declared in the header file matches the compiler would have no reason to generate an error. The only time I can imagine an error being generated if the linker notices multiple symbols with the same name. – torak May 6 '10 at 17:46
1  
@joefis: I don't see the connection to header files. You can define a function that "conflicts" with another function not declared in your translation unit at all. C does not scope linking space. All external symbols are piled up in one heap to be resolved. And again, the problem must exist for weak symbols only. Redefinition of normal (strong) symbols must be reported by the compiler (linker). If the compiler doesn't report, it is a serious problem with the compiler. – AndreyT May 6 '10 at 17:51
feedback

If the function does not need to be accessed outside of the C file it lives in then yes, I would recommend making the function static.

One thing you can do to help catch this is to use an editor that has configurable syntax highlighting. I personally use SciTE, and I have configured it to display all standard library function names in red. That way, it's easy to spot if I am re-using a name I shouldn't be using (nothing is enforced by the compiler, though).

link|improve this answer
feedback

It's relatively easy to write a script that runs nm -o on all your .o files and your libraries and checks to see if an external name is defined both in your program and in a library. Just one of the many sane sensible services that the Unix linker doesn't provide because it's stuck in 1974, looking at one file at a time. (Try putting libraries in the wrong order and see if you get a useful error message!)

link|improve this answer
I was actually thinking about scripting nm and I think I may end up still doing that. But to your last question, look at ld's -( option to group libraries that can be repeatedly searched until all undefined symbols are found. I found this gem today whilst searching ld's manpage for an answer to my question. – SiegeX May 7 '10 at 3:18
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.