KEXTLIBS(8) BSD System Manager's Manual KEXTLIBS(8)
NAME
kextlibs -- find OSBundleLibraries needed by a kext
SYNOPSIS
kextlibs [options] [--] kext ...
DESCRIPTION
The kextlibs utility searches for library kexts that define symbols needed for linking by kext, printing their bundle identifiers and ver-
sions to stdout. If the kext has a multiple-architecture executable, libraries are resolved for each architecture. If any symbols are not
found, or are found in multiple libraries, the numbers of such symbols are printed to standard error after the library kext information for
each architecture.
A handy use of kextlibs is to run it with just the -xml flag and pipe the output to pbcopy(1); if the exit status is zero (indicating no
undefined or multiply-defined symbols), you can open your kext's Info.plist file in a text editor and paste the library declarations over the
OSBundleLibraries property.
You can use kextlibs to find libraries for older releases of Mac OS X using the -repository option to specify an extensions folder to search
other than the extensions directories for the root volume (although releases prior to Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) don't check for architec-
ture-specific properties, so be sure to check the output and edit as needed). If you don't explicitly specify a repository directory,
kextlibs searches the root volume's /System/Library/Extensions and /Library/Extensions directories.
OPTIONS
-h, -help
Print a help message describing each option flag and exit with a success result, regardless of any other options on the command
line.
-all-symbols
Print reports on all symbols that remain undefined, all symbols that have been resolved in one library kext each, and all symbols
that have multiple definitions in different library kexts. Equivalent to specifying all of -undef-symbols, -onedef-symbols, and
-multdef-symbols. Normally only the number of missing and duplicate symbols is printed.
-c, -compatible-versions
Print the compatible version rather than the current version.
-multdef-symbols
Print all undefined symbols from kext found in more than one library kext, followed by those library kexts' bundle identifiers and
versions (or compatible versions if -compatible-versions was specified). Normally only the number of multiply-defined symbols is
printed.
-non-kpi
Search the compatibility kext, com.apple.kernel.6.0, rather than any of the com.apple.kpi.* system kexts. Use of this option is not
recommended: The exact kernel component (mach, bsd, libkern, or iokit) cannot be determined, and the compatible version of
com.apple.kernel is locked to its current version, so kexts linking against it can only load against that exact version.
-onedef-symbols
Print all undefined symbols from kext found in exactly one library kext, followed by that library kext's bundle identifier and ver-
sion (or compatible version if -compatible-versions was specified). Normally nothing is printed about symbols that are found once.
-r directory, -repository directory
Search directory for dependencies. This option may be specified multiple times. You can use this to get library declarations rela-
tive to a set of extensions other than those of the running system (such as for a different release of Mac OS X), or to include a
side directory of library kexts. Note: If you specify a directory with this option, the system extensions folders are not implic-
itly searched. See -system-extensions.
-e, -system-extensions
Add /System/Library/Extensions and /Library/Extensions to the list of directories to search. If you don't specify any directories
or kexts, this is used by default.
-undef-symbols
Print all undefined symbols from kext that can't be found in any library kexts. Normally only the number of symbols not found is
printed.
-unsupported
Search unsupported library kexts for symbols (by default they are not searched).
-v [0-6 | 0x####], -verbose [0-6 | 0x####]
Verbose mode; print information about program operation. Higher levels of verbosity include all lower levels. You can specify a
level from 0-6, or a hexadecimal log specification (as described in kext_logging(8)). For kextlibs, the decimal levels 1-6 generally
have little effect.
-xml Print an XML fragment to stdout suitable for copying and pasting directly into an Info.plist file. This option prints information
about libraries to stdout, and then prints information about symbols to stderr. In XML mode, if the libraries for all architectures
are the same, only one set of OSBundleLibraries is printed; if any differ from any others, architecture-specific listings for all
architectures are printed (OSBundleLibraries_i386, OSBundleLibraries_x86_64, and so on).
-- End of options.
FILES
/System/Library/Extensions/ The standard system repository of kernel extensions.
/Library/Extensions/ The standard repository of non Apple kernel extensions.
DIAGNOSTICS
The kextlibs utility exits with a status of 0 on completion if all undefined symbols are found exactly once; with a status of 1 if any unde-
fined symbols remain, or with a status of 2 if any symbols are found in more than one library kext (whether or not any undefined symbols
remain), and with another nonzero status on some other problem.
BUGS
kextlibs uses a simple algorithm of string matching to resolve symbols, and does not apply any of the patching that the full link process
does. This can cause it to fail when searching for symbols in a kext built against an SDK for a prior release of Mac OS X than the one on
which kextlibs is being used. In such cases, you can run kextlibs against the Extensions folder of that prior release using the -repository
option.
Many single-letter options are inconsistent in meaning with (or directly contradictory to) the same letter options in other kext tools.
SEE ALSO
kextutil(8), kextfind(8), kext_logging(8)
Darwin November 14, 2012 Darwin