Has anyone been able to create a hybrid of PE COFF and ELF?
I mean could a single binary file run in both Win32 and开发者_如何转开发 Linux i386 ?
This is not possible, because the two types have conflicting formats:
- The initial two characters of a PE file must be
'M' 'Z'
; - The initial four characters of an ELF file must be
'\x7f' 'E' 'L' 'F'
.
Clearly, you can't create one file that satisifies both formats.
In response to the comment about a polyglot binary valid as both a 16 bit COM file and a Linux ELF file, that's possible (although really a COM file is a DOS program, not Windows - and certainly not Win32).
Here's one I knocked together - compile it with NASM. It works because the first two bytes of an ELF file ('\x7f' 'E'
) happen to also be valid 8086 machine code (a 45 byte relative jump-if-greater-than instruction). Minimal ELF headers cribbed from Brian Raiter.
BITS 32
ORG 0x08048000
ehdr: ; Elf32_Ehdr
db 0x7F, "ELF", 1, 1, 1, 0 ; e_ident
times 8 db 0
dw 2 ; e_type
dw 3 ; e_machine
dd 1 ; e_version
dd _start ; e_entry
dd phdr - $$ ; e_phoff
dd 0 ; e_shoff
dd 0 ; e_flags
dw ehdrsize ; e_ehsize
dw phdrsize ; e_phentsize
dw 1 ; e_phnum
dw 0 ; e_shentsize
dw 0 ; e_shnum
dw 0 ; e_shstrndx
ehdrsize equ $ - ehdr
times 0x47-($-$$) db 0
; DOS COM File code
BITS 16
mov dx, msg1 - $$ + 0x100
mov ah, 0x09
int 0x21
mov ah, 0x00
int 0x21
msg1: db `Hello World (DOS).\r\n$`
BITS 32
phdr: ; Elf32_Phdr
dd 1 ; p_type
dd 0 ; p_offset
dd $$ ; p_vaddr
dd $$ ; p_paddr
dd filesize ; p_filesz
dd filesize ; p_memsz
dd 5 ; p_flags
dd 0x1000 ; p_align
phdrsize equ $ - phdr
; Linux ELF code
_start:
mov eax, 4 ; SYS_write
mov ebx, 1 ; stdout
mov ecx, msg2
mov edx, msg2_len
int 0x80
mov eax, 1 ; SYS_exit
mov ebx, 0
int 0x80
msg2: db `Hello World (Linux).\n`
msg2_len equ $ - msg2
filesize equ $ - $$
The two formats are sufficiently different that a hybrid is unlikely.
However, Linux supports loading different executable formats by "interpreter". This way compiled .exe
files containing CIL (compiled C# or other .NET languages) can be executed directly under Linux, for example.
Sure. Use Java.
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