How a program could generate the memory addresses for its variables, when it is about to run?

Rahul Ramasubramanian ramasubramanian.rahul at gmail.com
Fri May 27 03:11:00 EDT 2011


hi
this may help
http://www.akae.cn/study/ebook/computerscience/Linkers%20and%20Loaders.pdf

On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 2:56 AM, Rajat Sharma <fs.rajat at gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Sandeep,
>
> probably you want to look at how your program is loaded in memory. For
> example an ELF binary is understood by ELF format handler inside
> kernel. Format handler supply their load_binary methods to load a
> program image im memory and initial its different virtual memory areas
> (stack, heap etc.). exec system call searches for correct format
> handler for you based on file header.
>
> Please go thoroghly through Understanding the Linux Kernel, 3rd
> Edition, Chapter 20. Program ExZecution.
>
> -Rajat
>
> On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 12:14 PM, sandeep kumar
> <coolsandyforyou at gmail.com> wrote:
> > hi all,
> > I am new to the linux kernel internals. I know there is a memory
> management
> > subsystem which handles all the memory related things.
> >
> > But Now i want to know a bit deeper how things work.
> >
> > I want to start with the following question,
> > How a program could generate the memory addresses for its variables, when
> it
> > is about to run?
> >
> > Can please somebody give pointers how to learn this kind of things like,
> > "in the early stages (when our program is about to be executed..about to
> > become a process) what are the things that will be done by the kernel?"
> >
> > Please help me in this regard,
> >
> > Thanking you,
> > Sandeep Kumar A.
> >
> >
> >
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