I\'m currently working on a project where I need to track the usage of several system calls and low-level functions like mmap, brk, sbrk
see ld's option --wrap symbol. From the man page:
--wrap symbol Use a wrapper function for symbol. Any undefined reference to symbol will be resolved to "
__wrap_symbol". Any undefined reference to "__real_symbol" will be resolved to symbol.This can be used to provide a wrapper for a system function. The wrapper function should be called "
__wrap_symbol". If it wishes to call the system function, it should call "__real_symbol".Here is a trivial example:
void *
__wrap_malloc (size_t c)
{
printf ("malloc called with %zu\n", c);
return __real_malloc (c);
}
If you link other code with this file using --wrap malloc, then all calls to "
malloc" will call the function "__wrap_malloc" instead. The call to "__real_malloc" in
"__wrap_malloc" will call the real "malloc" function.You may wish to provide a "
__real_malloc" function as well, so that links without the --wrap option will succeed. If you do this, you should not put the definition of "__real_malloc" in the same file as "__wrap_malloc"; if you do, the assembler may resolve the call before the linker has a chance to wrap it to "malloc".
The other option is to possibly look at the source for ltrace, it is more or less does the same thing :-P.
Here's an idea though. You could have your LD_PRELOAD'ed library change the PLT entries to point to your code. This you technically the sbrk() function is still callable from your code nativly.