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Home/ Questions/Q 375061
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T14:27:58+00:00 2026-05-12T14:27:58+00:00

I am writing a simple user-space ELF loader under Linux (why? for ‘fun’). My

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I am writing a simple user-space ELF loader under Linux (why? for ‘fun’). My loader at the moment is quite simple and is designed to load only statically-linked ELF files containing position-independent code.

Normally, when a program is loaded by the kernel’s ELF loader, it is loaded into its own address space. As such, the data segment and code segment can be loaded at the correct virtual address as specified in the ELF segments.

In my case, however, I am requesting addresses from the kernel via mmap, and may or may not get the addresses requested in the ELF segments. This is not a problem for the code segment since it is position independent. However, if the data segment is not loaded at the expected address, code will not be able to properly reference anything stored in the data segment.

Indeed, my loader appears to work fine with a simple assembly executable that does not contain any data. But as soon as I add a data segment and reference it, the executable fails to run correctly or SEGFAULTs.

How, if possible, can I fixup any references to the data segment to point to the correct place? Is there a relocation section stored in the (static) ELF file for this purpose?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T14:27:58+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 2:27 pm

    If you modify the absolute addresses available in the .got section, (global offset table) your program should work. Make sure to modify the absolute address calculation to cater for the new distance between .text and .data, I’m afraid you need to figure out where this information comes from, for your architecture.

    See this: Global Offset Table (Processor-Specific)

    Good luck.

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