source: appendixa/glibc-desc.xml@ 8836e60

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Last change on this file since 8836e60 was 896cf74, checked in by Gerard Beekmans <gerard@…>, 21 years ago

renamed contenst to descriptions

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@2261 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

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1<sect2><title>Descriptions</title>
2
3<para>Last checked against version &glibc-contversion;.</para>
4
5<sect3><title>Program files descriptions</title>
6
7<sect4><title>catchsegv</title>
8<para>catchsegv can be used to create a stack trace when a program
9terminates with a segmentation fault.</para></sect4>
10
11<sect4><title>gencat</title>
12<para>gencat generates message catalogues.</para></sect4>
13
14<sect4><title>getconf</title>
15<para>getconf displays the system configuration values for filesystem
16specific variables.</para></sect4>
17
18<sect4><title>getent</title>
19<para>getent gets entries from an administrative database.</para></sect4>
20
21<sect4><title>glibcbug</title>
22<para>glibcbug creates a bug report about glibc and and mails it to the
23bug email address.</para></sect4>
24
25<sect4><title>iconv</title>
26<para>iconv performs character set conversion.</para></sect4>
27
28<sect4><title>iconvconfig</title>
29<para>iconvconfig creates fastloading iconv module
30configuration file.</para></sect4>
31
32<sect4><title>ldconfig</title>
33<para>ldconfig configures the dynamic linker run time bindings.</para></sect4>
34
35<sect4><title>ldd</title>
36<para>ldd prints the shared libraries required by each program or shared
37library specified on the command line.</para></sect4>
38
39<sect4><title>lddlibc4</title>
40<para>lddlibc4 assists ldd with object files.</para></sect4>
41
42<sect4><title>locale</title>
43<para>locale is a Perl program which tells the compiler to enable
44(or disable) the use of POSIX locales for built-in operations.</para></sect4>
45
46<sect4><title>localedef</title>
47<para>localedef compiles locale specifications.</para></sect4>
48
49<sect4><title>mtrace</title>
50<para>mtrace prints the multicast path from a source to a receiver (an IP
51trace query).</para></sect4>
52
53<sect4><title>nscd</title>
54<para>nscd is a daemon that provides a cache for the most common name
55service requests.</para></sect4>
56
57<sect4><title>nscd_nischeck</title>
58<para>nscd_nischeck checks whether or not secure mode is necessary for
59NIS+ lookup.</para></sect4>
60
61<sect4><title>pcprofiledump</title>
62<para>pcprofiledump dumps information generated by
63PC profiling.</para></sect4>
64
65<sect4><title>pt_chown</title>
66<para>pt_chown sets the owner, group and access permission of the
67slave pseudo terminal corresponding to the master pseudo terminal passed
68on file descriptor `3'. This is the helper program for the `grantpt'
69function. It is not intended to be run directly from the command
70line.</para></sect4>
71
72<sect4><title>rpcgen</title>
73<para>rpcgen generates C code to implement the RPC protocol.</para></sect4>
74
75<sect4><title>rpcinfo</title>
76<para>rpcinfo makes an RPC call to an RPC server.</para></sect4>
77
78<sect4><title>sln</title>
79<para>sln symbolically links dest to source. It is statically linked,
80needing no dynamic linking at all. Thus sln is useful to make symbolic
81links to dynamic libraries if the dynamic linking system for some reason
82is nonfunctional.</para></sect4>
83
84<sect4><title>sprof</title>
85<para>sprof reads and displays shared object profiling data.</para></sect4>
86
87<sect4><title>tzselect</title>
88<para>tzselect asks the user for information about the current location and
89outputs the resulting time zone description to standard output.</para></sect4>
90
91<sect4><title>xtrace</title>
92<para>xtrace traces execution of program by printing the currently executed
93function.</para></sect4>
94
95<sect4><title>zdump</title>
96<para>zdump is the time zone dumper.</para></sect4>
97
98<sect4><title>zic</title>
99<para>zic is the time zone compiler.</para></sect4>
100
101</sect3>
102
103<sect3><title>Library files descriptions</title>
104
105<sect4><title>ld.so</title>
106<para>ld.so is the helper program for shared library
107executables.</para></sect4>
108
109<sect4><title>libBrokenLocale</title>
110<para>Used by software, such as Mozilla, to solve broken locales.</para></sect4>
111
112<sect4><title>libSegFault</title>
113<para>libSegFault is a segmentation fault signal handler. It tries to catch
114segfaults.</para></sect4>
115
116<sect4><title>libanl</title>
117<para>libanl is an asynchronous name lookup library.</para></sect4>
118
119<sect4><title>libbsd-compat</title>
120<para>libbsd-compat provides the portability needed in order to run certain
121programs in Linux.</para></sect4>
122
123<sect4><title>libc, libc_nonshared</title>
124<para>These files constitute the main C library. The C library is a
125collection of commonly used functions in programs.
126This way a programmer doesn't need to create his own functions for every
127single task. The most common things like writing a string to the screen
128are already present and at the disposal of the programmer.</para>
129
130<para>The C library (actually almost every library) comes in two flavors:
131a dynamic and a static one. In short, when a program uses a static C
132library, the code from the C library is copied into the executable file.
133When a program uses a dynamic library, the executable will not
134contain the code from the C library, but instead a routine that loads
135the functions from the library at the time the program is run. This
136means a significant decrease in the file size of a program. The
137documentation that comes with the C library describes this in more
138detail, as it is too complicated to explain here in one or two
139lines.</para></sect4>
140
141<sect4><title>libcrypt</title>
142<para>libcrypt is the cryptography library.</para></sect4>
143
144<sect4><title>libdl</title>
145<para>libdl is the dynamic linking interface library.</para></sect4>
146
147<sect4><title>libg</title>
148<para>libg is a runtime library for g++.</para></sect4>
149
150<sect4><title>libieee</title>
151<para>libieee is the IEEE floating point library.</para></sect4>
152
153<sect4><title>libm</title>
154<para>libm is the mathematical library.</para></sect4>
155
156<sect4><title>libmcheck</title>
157<para>libmcheck contains code run at boot.</para></sect4>
158
159<sect4><title>libmemusage</title>
160<para>libmemusage is used by memusage to help collect information about the
161memory usage of a program.</para></sect4>
162
163<sect4><title>libnsl</title>
164<para>libnsl is the network services library.</para></sect4>
165
166<sect4><title>libnss_compat, libnss_dns, libnss_files,
167libnss_hesiod, libnss_nis, libnss_nisplus</title>
168<para>The basic idea is to put the implementation of the different services
169offered to access the databases in separate modules. This has some
170advantages:</para>
171<itemizedlist>
172<listitem><para>contributors can add new services without adding them to
173GNU C library,</para></listitem>
174<listitem><para>the modules can be updated separately,</para></listitem>
175<listitem><para>the C library image is smaller.</para></listitem>
176</itemizedlist></sect4>
177
178<sect4><title>libpcprofile</title>
179<para>Code used by the kernel to track CPU time spent in functions, source
180code lines, and instructions.</para></sect4>
181
182<sect4><title>libpthread</title>
183<para>The POSIX threads library.</para></sect4>
184
185<sect4><title>libresolv</title>
186<para>Functions in this library provide for creating, sending, and
187interpreting packets to the Internet domain name servers.</para></sect4>
188
189<sect4><title>librpcsvc</title>
190<para>Functions in this library provide miscellaneous RPC services.</para></sect4>
191
192<sect4><title>librt</title>
193<para>Functions in this library provide most of the interfaces specified by
194the POSIX.1b Realtime Extension.</para></sect4>
195
196<sect4><title>libthread_db</title>
197<para>Functions is this library are useful for building debuggers for
198multi-threaded programs.</para></sect4>
199
200<sect4><title>libutil</title>
201<para>Contains code for "standard" functions used in many different Unix
202utilities.</para></sect4>
203
204</sect3>
205
206</sect2>
207
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