> From: Thiago Jung Bauermann > Date: Sun, 14 Sep 2008 21:33:04 -0300 > > (I'd really, really like to talk to the person who thought it would be a > good idea to make + a shortcut to send the message.) Heh > El dom, 14-09-2008 a las 23:27 +0200, Mark Kettenis escribió: > > Many, if not all, processor-specific ELF ABI documents have the > > following definition of auxv entries: > > > > typedef struct > > { > > int a_type; > > union { > > long a_val; > > void *a_ptr; > > void (*a_fcn)(); > > } a_un; > > } auxv_t; > > I have this in in ppc64-linux: > > typedef struct > { > uint64_t a_type; /* Entry type */ > union > { > uint64_t a_val; /* Integer value */ > /* We use to have pointer elements added here. We cannot do that, > though, since it does not work when using 32-bit definitions > on 64-bit platforms and vice versa. */ > } a_un; > } Elf64_auxv_t; > > So default_auxv_parse seems right to me. Hmm, so it looks like Linux doesn't follow the 64-bit PowerPC ABI here. At least version 1.7 of that spec has the "standard" form of the struct with a_type being an int. OpenBSD and Solaris both use the "standard" form, so I'd argue that Linux is the odd one out here. I'll see if I can come up with a diff that overrides the standard layout for 64-bit PPC linux.