I am using LD_PRELOAD, and I am seeing a difference between bash and dash when using the system() command.
Let's consider this simple C program:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
system("echo $LD_PRELOAD > /tmp/blah.txt");
return 0;
}
I would start my test program like this:
LD_PRELOAD=preload.so ./test
Both in bash and dash, I got:
~$ cat /tmp/blah.txt
preload.so
So far so good except that the LD_PRELOAD is not applied to the command given to system when dash is the shell. I mean
- if /bin/sh points to /bin/bash, LD_PRELOAD is applied to the command given to system()
- if /bin/sh points to /bin/dash, LD_PRELOAD is NOT applied to the command given to system().
My preload.so library override open(). It is executed with the test program when bash is used (/bin/sh=/bin/bash), but not when dash is used (/bin/sh=/bin/dash).
I am guessing that bash and dash might treat the environment variables passed to execve differently, but I can not find a way with dash to have LD_PRELOAD applied to the command given to system... Unfortunately I have to use dash, and using bash is not an option.
system()simply invokes the shell, the effects being the same as command line. Post how you try your command line ondash, what you expect, and what you get. – Mark Galeck Aug 15 '16 at 20:44