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ELF object files

Segment contents

An object file segment comprises one or more sections, though this fact is transparent to the program header. Whether the file segment holds one or many sections also is immaterial to program loading. Nonetheless, various data must be present for program execution, dynamic linking, and so on. ``Text segment'' illustrates segment contents in general terms. The order and membership of sections within a segment may vary; moreover, processor-specific constraints may alter the examples below.

Text segments contain read-only instructions and data, typically including the following sections described earlier in this chapter. Other sections may also reside in loadable segments; these examples are not meant to give complete and exclusive segment contents.

.text
.rodata
.hash
.dynsym
.dynstr
.plt
.rel.got

Text segment


Data segments contain writable data and instructions, typically including the following sections.

.data
.dynamic
.got
.bss

Data segment

A PT_DYNAMIC program header element points at the .dynamic section. See ``Dynamic section'' for more information. The .got and .plt sections also hold information related to position-independent code and dynamic linking. Although the .plt appears in a text segment in the previous table, it may reside in a text or a data segment, depending on the processor.

As described in ``Section header'' in the first part of this chapter, the .bss section has the type SHT_NOBITS. Although it occupies no space in the file, it contributes to the segment's memory image. Normally, these uninitialized data reside at the end of the segment, thereby making p_memsz larger than p_filesz in the associated program header element.


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