1SCANELF(1)                Documentation for pax-utils               SCANELF(1)
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NAME

6       scanelf - user-space utility to scan ELF files
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SYNOPSIS

9       scanelf [options] ELFs or directories
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DESCRIPTION

12       scanelf is a user-space utility to quickly scan given ELFs,
13       directories, or common system paths for different information. This may
14       include ELF types, their PaX markings, TEXTRELs, etc...
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OPTIONS

17       -A, --archives
18           Scan archives (.a files)
19
20       -a, --all
21           Print all useful/simple info
22
23       -B, --nobanner
24           Don't display the header
25
26       -b, --bind
27           Print symbol binding information (lazy or now)
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29       -D, --endian
30           Print ELF endianness (big/little/...)
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32       -E, --etype ETYPE
33           Print only ELF files matching specified etype (like ET_DYN,
34           ET_EXEC, etc...)
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36       -e, --header
37           Print GNU_STACK markings
38
39       -F, --format FORMAT
40           Use specified format for output; see the FORMAT section for more
41           information
42
43       -f, --from FILE
44           Read input stream from specified filename
45
46       -g, --gmatch
47           Use strncmp to match libraries (use with -N). Or regexp with symbol
48           matching
49
50       -h, --help
51           Show condensed usage and exit
52
53       -I, --osabi
54           Print OSABI
55
56       -i, --interp
57           Print the interpreter information (.interp/PT_INTERP)
58
59       -k, --section SECTION
60           Find ELFs with the specified section. May be specified multiple
61           times to match multiple sections simultaneously. See SECTION
62           MATCHING for more info.
63
64       -L, --ldcache
65           Utilize ld.so.cache information (use with -r/-n)
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67       -l, --ldpath
68           Scan all directories in /etc/ld.so.conf
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70       -M, --bits BITS
71           Print only ELF files matching specified numeric bits (like 32/64)
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73       -m, --mount
74           Don't recursively cross mount points
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76       -N, --lib SONAME
77           Find ELFs that need the specified SONAME. May be specified multiple
78           times to match multiple SONAMEs simultaneously. See SONAME MATCHING
79           for more info.
80
81       -n, --needed
82           Print libraries the ELF is linked against (DT_NEEDED)
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84       -O, --perms PERMS
85           Print only ELF files with matching specified octal bits (like 755)
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87       -o, --file FILE
88           Write output stream to specified filename
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90       -p, --path
91           Scan all directories in PATH environment
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93       -q, --quiet
94           Only output 'bad' things
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96       -R, --recursive
97           Scan directories recursively
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99       -r, --rpath
100           Print runpaths encoded in the ELF (DT_RPATH/DT_RUNPATH)
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102       -S, --soname
103           Print the ELF's shared library name (DT_SONAME)
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105       -s, --symbol SYMBOL
106           Find the specified symbol; see SYMBOL MATCHING for more info
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108       -T, --textrels
109           Locate cause of TEXTRELs via objdump
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111       -t, --textrel
112           Print TEXTREL information
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114       -V, --version
115           Print version and exit
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117       -v, --verbose
118           Be verbose (can be used more than once)
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120       -X, --fix
121           Try and 'fix' bad things (use with -r/-e)
122
123       -x, --pax
124           Print PaX markings
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126       -Y, --eabi
127           Print EABI (only matters for a few architectures)
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129       -y, --symlink
130           Don't scan symlinks
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132       -Z, --size SIZE
133           Print ELF file size
134
135       -z, --setpax FLAGS
136           Sets EI_PAX/PT_PAX_FLAGS to specified flags (use with -Xx)
137
138       --use-ldpath
139           Use the ld.so.conf paths to find the full path to libraries (use in
140           conjunction with --needed).
141
142       --root PATH
143           Search the specified root tree instead of /. Generally paired with
144           options like -l or -p. This implicitly treats all paths specified
145           on the command line as relative to the root, so be sure to omit it
146           if you are explicitly listing ELFs.
147

FORMAT

149       The format string is much like a printf string in that it is a literal
150       string with flags requesting different information. For example, you
151       could use a format string and expect the following results.
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153             # scanelf -BF "file %f needs %n; funky time" /bin/bash
154             file bash needs libncurses.so.5,libdl.so.2,libc.so.6; funky time
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156
157       Note that when you use a format string, generally information related
158       flags should be omitted. In other words, you do not want to try and
159       request NEEDED output (-n) and try to specify a format output at the
160       same time as these operations are mutually exclusive. Each information
161       related flag has an equivalent conversion specifier, so use those
162       instead. You can of course continue to use non-information related
163       flags (such as --verbose).
164
165       There are three characters that introduce conversion specifiers.
166
167       · % - replace with info
168       · # - silent boolean match
169       · + - verbose match
170
171       And there are a number of conversion specifiers. We try to match up the
172       specifier with corresponding option.
173
174       · a - machine (EM) type
175       · b - bind flags
176       · e - program headers
177       · D - endian
178       · I - osabi
179       · Y - eabi
180       · F - long filename
181       · f - short filename
182       · i - interp
183       · k - section
184       · M - EI class
185       · N - specified needed
186       · n - needed libraries
187       · p - filename (minus search)
188       · o - etype
189       · O - perms
190       · r - runpaths
191       · S - SONAME
192       · s - symbol
193       · T - all textrels
194       · t - textrel status
195       · x - pax flags
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197

SYMBOL MATCHING

199       The string specified takes the form [%[modifiers]%][[+-]<symbol
200       name>][,[.....]].
201
202       If the symbol name is empty, then all symbols are matched.
203
204       If the symbol name is a glob ("*"), then all symbols are dumped in a
205       debug format. Do not rely on the structure of this output as it changes
206       whenever we feel like it.
207
208       If the first char of the symbol name is a plus ("+"), then only match
209       defined symbols. If it's a minus ("-"), only match undefined symbols.
210       When we say "defined", we mean the symbol is defined in the ELF vs
211       having an external reference.
212
213       Putting modifiers in between the percent signs ("%") allows for more in
214       depth filters. There are groups of modifiers. If you don't specify a
215       member of a group, then all types in that group are matched.
216
217       · STT group (symbol type)
218       · n - STT_NOTYPE
219       · o - STT_OBJECT
220       · f - STT_FUNC
221       · F - STT_FILE
222       · STB group (symbol binding)
223       · l - STB_LOCAL
224       · g - STB_GLOBAL
225       · w - STB_WEAK
226       · STV group (symbol visibility)
227       · p - STV_DEFAULT
228       · i - STV_INTERNAL
229       · h - STV_HIDDEN
230       · P - STV_PROTECTED
231       · SHN group (section header)
232       · d - defined
233       · u - SHN_UNDEF
234       · a - SHN_ABS
235       · c - SHN_COMMON
236
237       You can search for multiple symbols simultaneously by using a comma
238       (",") to separate different searches. Every symbol that matches will be
239       displayed while unmatched symbols will not.
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ELF ETYPES

242       You can narrow your search by specifying the ELF object file type
243       (ETYPE). The commandline option takes the numeric value and or symbolic
244       type. Multiple values can be passed comma separated. Example -E
245       ET_EXEC,ET_DYN,1
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247       Here is the normal list available for your pleasure. You of course are
248       free to specify any numeric value you want.
249
250       · 0 - ET_NONE - unknown type
251       · 1 - ET_REL - relocatable file
252       · 2 - ET_EXEC - executable file
253       · 3 - ET_DYN - shared object
254       · 4 - ET_CORE - core file
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ELF BITS

258       You can also narrow your search by specifying the ELF bitsize. Again,
259       specify the numeric value or the symbolic define.
260
261       · 32 - ELFCLASS32 - 32bit ELFs
262       · 64 - ELFCLASS64 - 64bit ELFs
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264

SECTION MATCHING

266       A !  prefix will only show ELF's that do not have the specified
267       section.
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NEEDED SONAME MATCHING

270       A !  prefix will only show ELF's that do not depend on the specified
271       library.
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HOMEPAGE

274       http://hardened.gentoo.org/pax-utils.xml
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REPORTING BUGS

277       Please include as much information as possible (using any available
278       debugging options) and send bug reports to the maintainers (see the
279       AUTHORS section). Please use the Gentoo bugzilla at
280       http://bugs.gentoo.org/ if possible.
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SEE ALSO

283       chpax(1), dumpelf(1), paxctl(1), pspax(1), readelf(1), scanelf(1),
284       elf(5)
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AUTHORS

287       Ned Ludd <solar@gentoo.org>
288           Maintainer
289
290       Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
291           Maintainer
292
293       Fabian Groffen <grobian@gentoo.org>
294           Mach-O Maintainer
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NOTES

297        1. http://hardened.gentoo.org/pax-utils.xml
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299        2. http://bugs.gentoo.org/
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303pax-utils 1.2.3                   02/24/2018                        SCANELF(1)
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