This loader provides a unified Go interface for loading shared libraries from memory on Windows, OSX, and Linux.
Also included is a cross-platform Call()
implementation that lets you call into exported symbols from those libraries without stress.
Basic Usage
libraryPath set to lib.so
for Linux, lib.dyld
for OSX, or lib.DLL
for Windows, then:
image, err = ioutil.ReadFile(libraryPath)
...
loader, err := universal.NewLoader()
...
library, err := loader.LoadLibrary("main", &image)
...
val, err := library.Call("Runme", 7)
...
Complete working examples of usage can be found in the examples/ folder in this repo.
Features and Limitations
- OSX backend uses the system loader, so multiple interdependent libraries can be loaded.
- OSX backend automatically adds the underscore prefix for you, so you can refer to symbols the same way on Linux, Windows, and OSX.
- Linux and Windows backends do not use the system loader, so interdependent libraries cannot be loaded.
- Linux backend does not use memfd!
I believe this is the first Golang Linux loader that does not use memfd!
Supported Architectures
- OSX arm64 M1 Apple Chip (tested)
This is the first loader I've seen, Golang or not, that works on the M1! - OSX amd64 (tested)
- Windows amd64 (tested)
- Windows 386 (untested, should work)
- Linux amd64 (tested)
- Linux 386 (untested, should work)
- Other POSIX systems on 386, amd64, or arm64 (untested, should work)
If you try this on any untested platforms, whether it works or not, let me know!