pvs(1) User Commands pvs(1)NAMEpvs - display the internal version information of dynamic objects
SYNOPSISpvs [-Cdlnorsv] [-I index-expr] [-N name] file...
DESCRIPTION
The pvs utility displays any internal version information contained
within an ELF file. Commonly, these files are dynamic executables and
shared objects, and possibly relocatable objects. This version informa‐
tion can fall into one of two categories:
o version definitions
o version dependencies
Version definitions describe the interfaces that are made available by
an ELF file. Each version definition is associated to a set of global
symbols provided by the file. Version definitions can be assigned to a
file during its creation by the link-editor using the -M option and the
associated mapfile directives. See the for more details.
Version dependencies describe the binding requirements of dynamic
objects on the version definitions of any shared object dependencies.
When a dynamic object is built with a shared object, the link-editor
records information within the dynamic object indicating that the
shared object is a dependency. This dependency must be satisfied at
runtime. If the shared object also contains version definitions, then
those version definitions that satisfy the global symbol requirements
of the dynamic object are also recorded in the dynamic object being
created. At process initialization, the runtime linker uses any version
dependencies as a means of validating the interface requirements of the
dynamic objects used to construct the process.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported. If neither the -d or -r options
are specified, both are enabled.
-C Demangles C++ symbol names.
-d Prints version definition information.
-I index-expr Qualifies the versions to examine with a specific
version index or index range. For example, the ver‐
sion with index 3 in an object can be displayed
using:
example% pvs-I 3 filename
An index-expr can be a single non-negative integer
value that specifies a specific version, as shown in
the previous example. Alternatively, an index-expr
can consist of two such values separated by a colon
(:), indicating a range of versions. The following
example displays the versions 3, 4, and 5 in a file:
example% pvs-I 3:5 filename
When specifying an index range, the second value can
be omitted to indicate the final item in the file.
For example, the following statement lists all ver‐
sions from the tenth to the end:
example% pvs-I 10: filename
See Matching Options for additional information about
the matching options (-I, -N).
-l Prints any symbols that have been reduced from global
to local binding due to versioning. By convention,
these symbol entries are located in the .symtab sec‐
tion, and fall between the FILE symbol representing
the output file, and the FILE symbol representing the
first input file used to generate the output file.
These reduced symbol entries are assigned the fabri‐
cated version definition _LOCAL_. No reduced symbols
will be printed if the file has been stripped (see
strip(1)), or if the symbol entry convention cannot
be determined.
Use of the -l option implicitly enables the -s option
-n Normalizes version definition information. By
default, all version definitions within the object
are displayed. However, version definitions can
inherit other version definitions. Under normaliza‐
tion, only the head of each inheritance list is dis‐
played.
-N name When used with the -d option, -N prints only the
information for the given version definition name and
any of its inherited version definitions.
When used with the -r option, -N prints only the
information for the given dependency file name. It is
possible to qualify a specific version from the
dependency file by including the version in parenthe‐
sis following the file name:
example% pvs-N 'dependency (version)' filename
See Matching Options for additional information about
the matching options (-I, -N).
-o Creates one-line version definition output. By
default, file, version definitions, and any symbol
output is indented to ease human inspection. This
option prefixes each output line with the file and
version definition name and can be more useful for
analysis with automated tools.
-r Prints version dependency (requirements) information.
-s Prints the symbols associated with each version defi‐
nition. Any data symbols from versions defined by the
object are accompanied with the size, in bytes, of
the data item.
-v Verbose output. Indicates any weak version defini‐
tions, and any version definition inheritance. When
used with the -N and -d options, the inheritance of
the base version definition is also shown. When used
with the -s option, the version symbol definition is
also shown.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported.
file The ELF file about which internal version information is dis‐
played.
USAGE
Matching Options
The -I and -N options are collectively referred to as the matching
options. These options are used to narrow the range of versions to
examine, by index or by name.
Any number and type of matching option can be mixed in a given invoca‐
tion of pvs. In this case, pvs displays the superset of all versions
matched by any of the matching options used. This feature allows for
the selection of complex groupings of items using the most convenient
form for specifying each item.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Displaying version definitions
The following example displays the version definitions of libelf.so.1:
% pvs-d /lib/libelf.so.1
libelf.so.1;
SUNW_1.1
Example 2 Creating a one-liner display
A normalized, one-liner display, suitable for creating a mapfile ver‐
sion control directive, can be created using the -n and -o options:
% pvs-don /lib/libelf.so.1
/lib/libelf.so.1 - SUNW_1.1;
Example 3 Displaying version requirements
The following example displays the version requirements of ldd and pvs:
% pvs-r /usr/bin/ldd /usr/bin/pvs
/usr/bin/ldd:
libelf.so.1 (SUNW_1.1);
libc.so.1 (SUNW_1.1);
/usr/bin/pvs:
libelf.so.1 (SUNW_1.1);
libc.so.1 (SUNW_1.1);
Example 4 Determining a dependency symbol version
The following example displays the shared object from which the ldd
command expects to find the printf function at runtime, as well as the
version it belongs to:
% pvs-ors /usr/bin/ldd | grep ' printf'
/usr/bin/ldd - libc.so.1 (SYSVABI_1.3): printf;
Example 5 Determine all dependency symbols from a specific version
The -N option can be used to obtain a list of all the symbols from a
dependency that belong to a specific version. To determine the symbols
that ldd will find from version SYSVABI_1.3 of libc.so.1:
% pvs-s -N 'libc.so.1 (SYSVABI_1.3)' /usr/bin/ldd
libc.so.1 (SYSVABI_1.3):
_exit;
strstr;
printf;
__fpstart;
strncmp;
lseek;
strcmp;
getopt;
execl;
close;
fflush;
wait;
strerror;
putenv;
sprintf;
getenv;
open;
perror;
fork;
strlen;
geteuid;
access;
setlocale;
atexit;
fprintf;
exit;
read;
malloc;
Note that the specific list of symbols used by ldd may change between
Solaris releases.
Example 6 Display base defined version by index
By convention, the base global version defined by an object has the
name of the object. For example, the base version of pvs is named
'pvs'. The base version of any object is always version index 1. There‐
fore, the -I option can be used to display the base version of any
object without having to specify its name:
% pvs-v -I 1 /usr/bin/pvs
pvs [BASE];
EXIT STATUS
If the requested version information is not found, a non-zero value is
returned. Otherwise, a 0 value is returned.
Version information is determined not found when any of the following
is true:
o the -d option is specified and no version definitions are
found.
o the -r option is specified and no version requirements are
found.
o neither the -d nor -r option is specified and no version
definitions or version requirements are found.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │developer/linker │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOelfdump(1), ld(1), ldd(1), strip(1), elf(3ELF), attributes(5)SunOS 5.10 1 Jan 2011 pvs(1)