On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 2:07 PM, wrote: > On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 12:24:28PM -0400, Rich Felker wrote: > > > >>> On Tue, May 16, 2017 at 08:38:56PM -0400, John Regan wrote: > > > >>> > Hi there - I was wondering if it's possible to somehow set > argv[0] when > > > >>> > calling the dynamic linker to load a program. > > > > >>> Set argv[0] to whatever you need when you exec*() the dynamic > loader, > > > >>> which is straightforward with a binary wrapper (not with a shell). > > > >>> > > > >>> A binary wrapper also adds less overhead then going through a > shell. > > > > >>> Rune > > > a completely reasonable and recommended way for deploying dynamic > > linked apps in a self-contained way that doesn't depend on musl libc > > on the host. Unfortunately there's no way to set argv[0] like you want > > We do deploy dynamic linked apps without any dependencies on the libraries > on the host. It works just fine with musl-as-it-is, including the > questionably designed applications like busybox and gcc who > analyze argv[0]. > > > at this time. Perhaps adding an option like --argv0=foo would be > > appropriate. > > What would be the justification for adding the supporting code (to every > instance of the dynamic loader)? > > It looks like --argv0=foo is meant to overcome a specific limitation in > bourne shell, in a specific context where the task can be solved easily > and generally better without involving the bourne shell in the first hand. > > I would like to see an example of a situation where a wrapper in C (or > any language allowing setting of argv[0]) is less appropriate? > > If one really has a reason to express the wrapper in sh, a one-liner in > C and an extra exec from the shell (much cheaper than starting the > shell itself was) is sufficient to make it work. > > Rune > > Hi Rune - would you mind sharing some tips on doing that? I wrote and compiled a short program that just dumps the elements in argv, then a wrapper program that figures out the needed paths for libc, real binary, etc, but it seems like argv[0] gets reset by the dynamic loader. I'm calling execve with the path to the libc.so, and argv is somenthing like: argv[0] - desired process name argv[1] - full path to the real binary argv[2...] arguments The 'real' binary is loaded and ran, but winds up printing out: argv[0] - full path to the real binary argv[1...] arguments