Ruby interpreter embed in C code - c

I just try a simple example from a book:
I have a sum.rb file:
class Summer
def sum(max)
raise "Invalid maximum #{max}" if max < 0
(max*max + max)/2
end
end
And a embed_sum.c file:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ruby/ruby.h>
int main ( int argc, char ** argv)
{
VALUE result;
ruby_sysinit(&argc, &argv);
RUBY_INIT_STACK;
ruby_init();
ruby_init_loadpath();
rb_require("sum");
rb_eval_string("$summer = Summer.new");
rb_eval_string("$result = $summer.sum(10)");
result = rb_gv_get("result");
printf("Result = %d\n", NUM2INT(result));
return ruby_cleanup(0);
}
The I compile it with:
gcc -Wall -lruby -I/usr/include/ruby-1.9.1/ embed_sum.c -o embed_sum
When I launch ./embed_sum it gives me a segmentation fault from the first rb_eval_string.
my version of ruby is : ruby 1.9.3p125 (2012-02-16 revision 34643) [x86_64-linux] on Archlinux.
What can be the problem with this example?

The short answer to your problem is to change the line rb_require("sum"); to rb_require("./sum");. This is the change introduced in Ruby 1.9.2 where the current directory is no longer on the load path.
The more general problem is the way embedded Ruby deals with exceptions. The Pickaxe book (which I think is the book you're using, it uses a similar example) has this to say:
If the Ruby code raises an exception and it isn't caught, your C program will terminate. To overcome this, you need to do what the interpreter does and protect all calls that could raise an exception. This can get messy.
You'll need to look into using the rb_protect function to wrap calls to Ruby that might cause an exception. The Pickaxe book has an example of this.

Related

How does C handle complex equations if using REALs

This is probably and easy one for you guys, but I couldn't find a definitive answer and I just want to be sure I'm not overlooking anything. I have an equation, which I know permits complex solutions, but I've programmed it in C using "double" and/or "float". Does C simply ignore the complex part if I don't use "complex" types? In other words, does it simply return the real part? Will it generate any errors by not using "complex"? Thanks.
There is a 'complex' and an 'imaginary' data type in C. However, since it has only been a few years since it has been introduced, some of the old systems might not support it. So, its best to handle that kind of solutions explicitly.
If you are performing an illegal operation like sqrt(-1), then it will generate an error.
The following post most probably answers your queries better How to work with complex numbers in C?
The documentation for sqrt() (if you read it) tells you it returns a domain error.
You can find this out for yourself with a test case:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <errno.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
double foo = -1.234;
double foo_sqrt = sqrt(foo);
if (errno == EDOM) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error: EDOM - Mathematics argument out of domain of function (POSIX.1, C99)\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
/* we never get here */
fprintf(stdout, "sqrt(%f) = %f\n", foo, sqrt(foo));
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Then compile and run:
$ gcc -lm -std=c99 -Wall sqrt_test.c -o sqrt_test
$ ./sqrt_test
Error: EDOM - Mathematics argument out of domain of function (POSIX.1, C99)
$ echo $?
1

Confusion about output of program

I am new to C programming and I am currently learning loops. In the below program,
#include<stdio.h>
main()
{
int i;
for(i=1;i++<=5;printf("%d",i));
}
i tried to compile in dev c++ compiler but it is giving error "[Error] ld returned 1 exit status"
You need to include the <stdio.h> header, and also, main needs a return type (int) and a return value. Changing the program to this will make it compile (at least it did using GCC) and run:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int i;
for(i=1;i++<=5;printf("%d",i));
return 0;
}
The quotes you used in the “%d” are illegal too, use normal quotes: "%d".
Apart from that, doing the printf inside the loop head might be legal, but it's pretty bad style. Usually in a for-loop you would have have initialization;condition;increment(or decrement or w/e) in the head, and do side-effects in the body of the statement.
I would try writing the for loop as:
for(i=1;i < 6;i++) { printf(“%d”,i); }
I have run this program manually on my notebook and i got Output 23456
Then i run this on Dev c++ and it is giving the same output 23456 without any error and i have just copied and pasted from ur question dun know why its showing error on ur runtime may be u have not saved it as C file

ANSI C library for Aspect-Oriented Programming

I'm searching for a good ANSI C library for Aspect-Oriented Programming.
Some desired features are:
Accessing and modifying arguments of the target function.
Making the target function return and controlling the return value.
I found aspeCt C (https://sites.google.com/a/gapp.msrg.utoronto.ca/aspectc/home), reading the documentation it seems to have everything I need, but when, following the instructions, I run make to compile and pass the tests, the tests fail.
There is any alternative?
You can try AspectC++
is a project that extends the AspectJ approach to C/C++.
For example if you want to a simple C program using Aspect:
int main() {
printf("world");
}
And then you will have an aspect.cc
before(): execution(int main()) {
printf("Hello ");
}
after(): execution(int main()) {
printf(" from AspectC ! \n");
}
You compile both with > acc hello.ac world.mc
And the result is:
gcc hello.c world.c
>./a.out
Hello world from AspectC !

C Build error when getting the value of sin()

I have recently started learning C as a side project. I am working under OpenSuse with the latest NetBeans using the GCC as toolset for compiling.
One of the very first programs that I made was this:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <math.h>
/*
*
*/
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
double rad = 1;
double result = 0;
result = sin(rad);
return (EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
This is a simple, no-brainer example that should have worked without a problem. However, I get a Build Error: Exit code 2(error in line 18, undefined reference to sin) when trying to compile.
Interestingly enough, if I remove the assignment of the value of sin(rad) to result OR replace rad with a hard coded value, the program compiles just fine.
What am I doing wrong here?
In C, you need to link to the math library:
Add this to the command line options:
-lm
Be sure that your are linking with the math library.
$ gcc myprog.c -lm

Can gdb make a function pointer point to another location?

I'll explain:
Let's say I'm interested in replacing the rand() function used by a certain application.
So I attach gdb to this process and make it load my custom shared library (which has a customized rand() function):
call (int) dlopen("path_to_library/asdf.so")
This would place the customized rand() function inside the process' memory. However, at this point the symbol rand will still point to the default rand() function. Is there a way to make gdb point the symbol to the new rand() function, forcing the process to use my version?
I must say I'm also not allowed to use the LD_PRELOAD (linux) nor DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES (mac os x) methods for this, because they allow code injection only in the beginning of the program execution.
The application that I would like to replace rand(), starts several threads and some of them start new processes, and I'm interested in injecting code on one of these new processes. As I mentioned above, GDB is great for this purpose because it allows code injection into a specific process.
I followed this post and this presentation and came up with the following set of gdb commands for OSX with x86-64 executable, which can be loaded with -x option when attaching to the process:
set $s = dyld_stub_rand
set $p = ($s+6+*(int*)($s+2))
call (void*)dlsym((void*)dlopen("myrand.dylib"), "my_rand")
set *(void**)$p = my_rand
c
The magic is in set $p = ... command. dyld_stub_rand is a 6-byte jump instruction. Jump offset is at dyld_stub_rand+2 (4 bytes). This is a $rip-relative jump, so add offset to what $rip would be at this point (right after the instruction, dyld_stub_rand+6).
This points to a symbol table entry, which should be either real rand or dynamic linker routine to load it (if it was never called). It is then replaced by my_rand.
Sometimes gdb will pick up dyld_stub_rand from libSystem or another shared library, if that happens, unload them first with remove-symbol-file before running other commands.
This question intrigued me, so I did a little research. What you are looking for is a 'dll injection'. You write a function to replace some library function, put it in a .so, and tell ld to preload your dll. I just tried it out and it worked great! I realize this doesn't really answer your question in relation to gdb, but I think it offers a viable workaround.
For a gdb-only solution, see my other solution.
// -*- compile-command: "gcc -Wall -ggdb -o test test.c"; -*-
// test.c
#include "stdio.h"
#include "stdlib.h"
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
//should print a fairly random number...
printf("Super random number: %d\n", rand());
return 0;
}
/ -*- compile-command: "gcc -Wall -fPIC -shared my_rand.c -o my_rand.so"; -*-
//my_rand.c
int rand(void)
{
return 42;
}
compile both files, then run:
LD_PRELOAD="./my_rand.so" ./test
Super random number: 42
I have a new solution, based on the new original constraints. (I am not deleting my first answer, as others may find it useful.)
I have been doing a bunch of research, and I think it would work with a bit more fiddling.
In your .so rename your replacement rand function, e.g my_rand
Compile everything and load up gdb
Use info functions to find the address of rand in the symbol table
Use dlopen then dlsym to load the function into memory and get its address
call (int) dlopen("my_rand.so", 1) -> -val-
call (unsigned int) dlsym(-val-, "my_rand") -> my_rand_addr
-the tricky part- Find the hex code of a jumpq 0x*my_rand_addr* instruction
Use set {int}*rand_addr* = *my_rand_addr* to change symbol table instruction
Continue execution: now whenever rand is called, it will jump to my_rand instead
This is a bit complicated, and very round-about, but I'm pretty sure it would work. The only thing I haven't accomplished yet is creating the jumpq instruction code. Everything up until that point works fine.
I'm not sure how to do this in a running program, but perhaps LD_PRELOAD will work for you. If you set this environment variable to a list of shared objects, the runtime loader will load the shared object early in the process and allow the functions in it to take precedence over others.
LD_PRELOAD=path_to_library/asdf.so path/to/prog
You do have to do this before you start the process but you don't have to rebuild the program.
Several of the answers here and the code injection article you linked to in your answer cover chunks of what I consider the optimal gdb-oriented solution, but none of them pull it all together or cover all the points. The code-expression of the solution is a bit long, so here's a summary of the important steps:
Load the code to inject. Most of the answers posted here use what I consider the best approach -- call dlopen() in the inferior process to link in a shared library containing the injected code. In the article you linked to the author instead loaded a relocatable object file and hand-linked it against the inferior. This is quite frankly insane -- relocatable objects are not "ready-to-run" and include relocations even for internal references. And hand-linking is tedious and error-prone -- far simpler to let the real runtime dynamic linker do the work. This does mean getting libdl into the process in the first place, but there are many options for doing that.
Create a detour. Most of the answers posted here so far have involved locating the PLT entry for the function of interest, using that to find the matching GOT entry, then modifying the GOT entry to point to your injected function. This is fine up to a point, but certain linker features -- e.g., use of dlsym -- can circumvent the GOT and provide direct access to the function of interest. The only way to be certain of intercepting all calls to a particular function is overwrite the initial instructions of that function's code in-memory to create a "detour" redirecting execution to your injected function.
Create a trampoline (optional). Frequently when doing this sort of injection you'll want to call the original function whose invocation you are intercepting. The way to allow this with a function detour is to create a small code "trampoline" which includes the overwritten instructions of the original function then a jump to the remainder of the original. This can be complex, because any IP-relative instructions in the copied set need to be modified to account for their new addresses.
Automate it all. These steps can be tedious, even if doing some of the simpler solutions posted in other answers. The best way to ensure that the steps are done correctly every time with variable parameters (injecting different functions, etc) is to automate their execution. Starting with the 7.0 series, gdb has included the ability to write new commands in Python. This support can be used to implement a turn-key solution for injecting and detouring code in/to the inferior process.
Here's an example. I have the same a and b executables as before and an inject2.so created from the following code:
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int (*rand__)(void) = NULL;
int
rand(void)
{
int result = rand__();
printf("rand invoked! result = %d\n", result);
return result % 47;
}
I can then place my Python detour command in detour.py and have the following gdb session:
(gdb) source detour.py
(gdb) exec-file a
(gdb) set follow-fork-mode child
(gdb) catch exec
Catchpoint 1 (exec)
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/llasram/ws/detour/a
a: 1933263113
a: 831502921
[New process 8500]
b: 918844931
process 8500 is executing new program: /home/llasram/ws/detour/b
[Switching to process 8500]
Catchpoint 1 (exec'd /home/llasram/ws/detour/b), 0x00007ffff7ddfaf0 in _start ()
from /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
(gdb) break main
Breakpoint 2 at 0x4005d0: file b.c, line 7.
(gdb) cont
Continuing.
Breakpoint 2, main (argc=1, argv=0x7fffffffdd68) at b.c:7
7 {
(gdb) detour libc.so.6:rand inject2.so:rand inject2.so:rand__
(gdb) cont
Continuing.
rand invoked! result = 392103444
b: 22
Program exited normally.
In the child process, I create a detour from the rand() function in libc.so.6 to the rand() function in inject2.so and store a pointer to a trampoline for the original rand() in the rand__ variable of inject2.so. And as expected, the injected code calls the original, displays the full result, and returns that result modulo 47.
Due to length, I'm just linking to a pastie containing the code for my detour command. This is a fairly superficial implementation (especially in terms of the trampoline generation), but it should work well in a large percentage of cases. I've tested it with gdb 7.2 (most recently released version) on Linux with both 32-bit and 64-bit executables. I haven't tested it on OS X, but any differences should be relatively minor.
For executables you can easily find the address where the function pointer is stored by using objdump. For example:
objdump -R /bin/bash | grep write
00000000006db558 R_X86_64_JUMP_SLOT fwrite
00000000006db5a0 R_X86_64_JUMP_SLOT write
Therefore, 0x6db5a0 is the adress of the pointer for write. If you change it, calls to write will be redirected to your chosen function. Loading new libraries in gdb and getting function pointers has been covered in earlier posts. The executable and every library have their own pointers. Replacing affects only the module whose pointer was changed.
For libraries, you need to find the base address of the library and add it to the address given by objdump. In Linux, /proc/<pid>/maps gives it out. I don't know whether position-independent executables with address randomization would work. maps-information might be unavailable in such cases.
As long as the function you want to replace is in a shared library, you can redirect calls to that function at runtime (during debugging) by poking at the PLT. Here is an article that might be helpful:
Shared library call redirection using ELF PLT infection
It's written from the standpoint of malware modifying a program, but a much easier procedure is adaptable to live use in the debugger. Basically you just need to find the function's entry in the PLT and overwrite the address with the address of the function you want to replace it with.
Googling for "PLT" along with terms like "ELF", "shared library", "dynamic linking", "PIC", etc. might find you more details on the subject.
You can still us LD_PRELOAD if you make the preloaded function understand the situations it's getting used in. Here is an example that will use the rand() as normal, except inside a forked process when it will always return 42. I use the dl routines to load the standard library's rand() function into a function pointer for use by the hijacked rand().
// -*- compile-command: "gcc -Wall -fPIC -shared my_rand.c -o my_rand.so -ldl"; -*-
//my_rand.c
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
int pid = 0;
int (*real_rand)(void) = NULL;
void f(void) __attribute__ ((constructor));
void f(void) {
pid = getpid();
void* dl = dlopen("libc.so.6", RTLD_LAZY);
if(dl) {
real_rand = dlsym(dl, "rand");
}
}
int rand(void)
{
if(pid == getpid() && real_rand)
return real_rand();
else
return 42;
}
//test.c
#include <dlfcn.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
printf("Super random number: %d\n", rand());
if(fork()) {
printf("original process rand: %d\n", rand());
} else {
printf("forked process rand: %d\n", rand());
}
return 0;
}
jdizzle#pudding:~$ ./test
Super random number: 1804289383
original process rand: 846930886
forked process rand: 846930886
jdizzle#pudding:~$ LD_PRELOAD="/lib/ld-linux.so.2 ./my_rand.so" ./test
Super random number: 1804289383
original process rand: 846930886
forked process rand: 42
I found this tutorial incredibly useful, and so far its the only way I managed to achieve what I was looking with GDB: Code Injection into Running Linux Application: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/DLL/code_injection.aspx
There is also a good Q&A on code injection for Mac here: http://www.mikeash.com/pyblog/friday-qa-2009-01-30-code-injection.html
I frequently use code injection as a method of mocking for automated testing of C code. If that's the sort of situation you're in -- if your use of GDB is simply because you're not interested in the parent processes, and not because you want to interactively select the processes which are of interest -- then you can still use LD_PRELOAD to achieve your solution. Your injected code just needs to determine whether it is in the parent or child processes. There are several ways you could do this, but on Linux, since your child processes exec(), the simplest is probably to look at the active executable image.
I produced two executables, one named a and the other b. Executable a prints the result of calling rand() twice, then fork()s and exec()s b twice. Executable b print the result of calling rand() once. I use LD_PRELOAD to inject the result of compiling the following code into the executables:
// -*- compile-command: "gcc -D_GNU_SOURCE=1 -Wall -std=gnu99 -O2 -pipe -fPIC -shared -o inject.so inject.c"; -*-
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
#define constructor __attribute__((__constructor__))
typedef int (*rand_t)(void);
typedef enum {
UNKNOWN,
PARENT,
CHILD
} state_t;
state_t state = UNKNOWN;
rand_t rand__ = NULL;
state_t
determine_state(void)
{
pid_t pid = getpid();
char linkpath[PATH_MAX] = { 0, };
char exepath[PATH_MAX] = { 0, };
ssize_t exesz = 0;
snprintf(linkpath, PATH_MAX, "/proc/%d/exe", pid);
exesz = readlink(linkpath, exepath, PATH_MAX);
if (exesz < 0)
return UNKNOWN;
switch (exepath[exesz - 1]) {
case 'a':
return PARENT;
case 'b':
return CHILD;
}
return UNKNOWN;
}
int
rand(void)
{
if (state == CHILD)
return 47;
return rand__();
}
constructor static void
inject_init(void)
{
rand__ = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "rand");
state = determine_state();
}
The result of running a with and without injection:
$ ./a
a: 644034683
a: 2011954203
b: 375870504
b: 1222326746
$ LD_PRELOAD=$PWD/inject.so ./a
a: 1023059566
a: 986551064
b: 47
b: 47
I'll post a gdb-oriented solution later.

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