.Dd August 28, 2008 .Dt DLSYM 3 .Sh NAME .Nm dlsym .Nd get address of a symbol .Sh SYNOPSIS .In dlfcn.h .Ft void* .Fn dlsym "void* handle" "const char* symbol" .Sh DESCRIPTION .Fn dlsym returns the address of the code or data location specified by the null-terminated character string .Fa symbol . Which libraries and bundles are searched depends on the .Fa handle parameter. .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with a .Fa handle , returned by .Fn dlopen then only that image and any libraries it depends on are searched for .Fa symbol . .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_DEFAULT , then all mach-o images in the process (except those loaded with dlopen(xxx, RTLD_LOCAL)) are searched in the order they were loaded. This can be a costly search and should be avoided. .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_NEXT , then dyld searches for the symbol in the dylibs the calling image linked against when built. It is usually used when you intentionally have multiply defined symbol across images and want to find the "next" definition. It searches other images for the definition that the caller would be using if it did not have a definition. The exact search algorithm depends on whether the caller's image was linked -flat_namespace or -twolevel_namespace. For flat linked images, the search starts in the load ordered list of all images, in the image right after the caller's image. For two-level images, the search simulates how the static linker would have searched for the symbol when linking the caller's image. .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_SELF , then the search for the symbol starts with the image that called .Fn dlsym . If it is not found, the search continues as if RTLD_NEXT was used. .Pp If .Fn dlsym is called with the special .Fa handle .Dv RTLD_MAIN_ONLY , then it only searches for .Fa symbol in the main executable. .Pp .Sh RETURN VALUES The .Fn dlsym function returns a null pointer if the symbol cannot be found, and sets an error condition which may be queried with .Fn dlerror . .Pp .Sh NOTES The symbol name passed to .Fn dlsym is the name used in C source code. For example to find the address of function foo(), you would pass "foo" as the symbol name. This is unlike the older dyld APIs which required a leading underscore. If you looking up a C++ symbol, you need to use the mangled C++ symbol name. .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr dlopen 3 .Xr dlsym 3 .Xr dlerror 3 .Xr dyld 3 .Xr ld 1 .Xr cc 1