Question

I'm creating an ELF executable file and I need to know what sections are required by the operating system in order to load and execute it.

Details:

OS:               Ubuntu 10.04 (64-bit)
Kernel version:   2.6.32-24
Architecture:     i386

I realize that the following would probably be necessary:

  • .text
  • .symtab
  • .rel.text

Are there others?

Was it helpful?

Solution

"A Whirlwind Tutorial on Creating Really Teensy ELF Executables for Linux " has information on how to (ab)use the various ELF sections to make an executable as small as possible. It also contains a link to the ELF specification if you need more information. (It's also a fairly entertaining read.) Maybe it will tell you what you need to know?

OTHER TIPS

I decided to try systematically stripping sections from an ELF file generated by GCC.

I was able to remove many of the sections, but these could not be removed and have the executable still execute without a segmentation fault:

.dynsym
.dynstr
.gnu.version_r
.rel.plt
.init
.plt
.text
.fini
.ctors
.dtors
.dynamic
.got.plt
.data
.strtab
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