Add $APR_DEEPBIND to enable use of RTLD_DEEPBIND in apr_dso_open(). --- apr-1.4.8/dso/unix/dso.c.deepbind +++ apr-1.4.8/dso/unix/dso.c @@ -38,6 +38,8 @@ #define DYLD_LIBRARY_HANDLE (void *)-1 #endif +static int use_deepbind; /* 0 = unset, 1 = use DEEPBIND, -1, don't use DEEPBIND */ + APR_DECLARE(apr_status_t) apr_os_dso_handle_put(apr_dso_handle_t **aprdso, apr_os_dso_handle_t osdso, apr_pool_t *pool) @@ -125,6 +127,12 @@ #else int flags = RTLD_NOW | RTLD_GLOBAL; void *os_handle; + + if (use_deepbind == 0) + use_deepbind = getenv("APR_DEEPBIND") != NULL ? 1 : -1; + if (use_deepbind == 1) + flags |= RTLD_DEEPBIND; + #ifdef _AIX if (strchr(path + 1, '(') && path[strlen(path) - 1] == ')') { --- apr-1.7.0/README.deepbind.deepbind +++ apr-1.7.0/README.deepbind @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +This distribution of APR contains a modification of the behaviour of +the apr_dso_open() function which allows users enable the +"RTLD_DEEPBIND" flag when dlopen() is called. + +If the "APR_DEEPBIND" environment variable is set at runtime, the +RTLD_DEEPBIND flag is always added to the flags passed to dlopen(). + +With normal use of dlopen(), dynamically loaded objects will use +global symbols in preference to any symbols defined within the object. +Using RTLD_DEEPBIND reverses this binding order. See the dlopen(3) +man page for more information. + +This can be useful with Apache httpd, where two different modules are +loaded like: + +1. mod_foo.so uses library "libfoo.so" + libfoo.so defines a function "SomeSym" +2. mod_bar.so uses library "libbar.so" + libbar.so defines a different "SomeSym" function + +By default, mod_bar or mod_foo would use the "SomeSym" definition from +the "wrong" library depending on the load order. If RTLD_DEEPBIND is +used, the "SomeSym" definition will always be mapped to the definition +from the corresponding dependent library. This can avoid symbol +conflicts. + +There are some risks with using RTLD_DEEPBIND, in particular potential +issues with modules written in C++. It is not recommended to enable +$APR_DEEPBIND unless it solves a specific problem and after thorough +testing of the configuration.