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PERSONALITY(2) Linux Programmer's Manual PERSONALITY(2)

personality - set the process execution domain

#include <sys/personality.h>

int personality(unsigned long persona);

Linux supports different execution domains, or personalities, for each process. Among other things, execution domains tell Linux how to map signal numbers into signal actions. The execution domain system allows Linux to provide limited support for binaries compiled under other UNIX-like operating systems.

If persona is not 0xffffffff, then personality() sets the caller's execution domain to the value specified by persona. Specifying persona as 0xffffffff provides a way of retrieving the current persona without changing it.

A list of the available execution domains can be found in <sys/personality.h>. The execution domain is a 32-bit value in which the top three bytes are set aside for flags that cause the kernel to modify the behavior of certain system calls so as to emulate historical or architectural quirks. The least significant byte is a value defining the personality the kernel should assume. The flag values are as follows:

With this flag set, provide legacy virtual address space layout.
With this flag set, disable address-space-layout randomization.
Limit the address space to 32 bits.
With this flag set, use 0xc0000000 as the offset at which to search a virtual memory chunk on mmap(2); otherwise use 0xffffe000.
User-space function pointers to signal handlers point (on certain architectures) to descriptors.
Map page 0 as read-only (to support binaries that depend on this SVr4 behavior).
With this flag set, PROT_READ implies PROT_EXEC for mmap(2).
No effects(?).
With this flag set, select(2), pselect(2), and ppoll(2) do not modify the returned timeout argument when interrupted by a signal handler.
Have uname(2) report a 2.6.40+ version number rather than a 3.x version number. Added as a stopgap measure to support broken applications that could not handle the kernel version-numbering switch from 2.6.x to 3.x.
No effects(?).

The available execution domains are:

BSD. (No effects.)
Support for 32-bit HP/UX. This support was never complete, and was dropped so that since Linux 4.0, this value has no effect.
IRIX 5 32-bit. Never fully functional; support dropped in Linux 2.6.27. Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS.
IRIX 6 64-bit. Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS; otherwise no effects.
IRIX 6 new 32-bit. Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS; otherwise no effects.
Linux.
[To be documented.]
Implies ADDR_LIMIT_3GB.
Implies ADDR_LIMIT_32BIT.
Implies FDPIC_FUNCPTRS.
OSF/1 v4. On alpha, clear top 32 bits of iov_len in the user's buffer for compatibility with old versions of OSF/1 where iov_len was defined as. int.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and WHOLE_SECONDS; otherwise no effects.
[To be documented.]
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS, WHOLE_SECONDS, and SHORT_INODE; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS. Divert library and dynamic linker searches to /usr/gnemul. Buggy, largely unmaintained, and almost entirely unused; support was removed in Linux 2.6.26.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and SHORT_INODE; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and MMAP_PAGE_ZERO; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and MMAP_PAGE_ZERO; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and SHORT_INODE; otherwise no effects.
Implies STICKY_TIMEOUTS and SHORT_INODE; otherwise no effects.

On success, the previous persona is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.

The kernel was unable to change the personality.

This system call first appeared in Linux 1.1.20 (and thus first in a stable kernel release with Linux 1.2.0); library support was added in glibc 2.3.

personality() is Linux-specific and should not be used in programs intended to be portable.

setarch(8)

This page is part of release 5.10 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

2017-09-15 Linux