4 Tunables is a feature in the GNU C Library that allows application authors and
5 distribution maintainers to alter the runtime library behaviour to match their
8 The tunable framework allows modules within glibc to register variables that
9 may be tweaked through an environment variable. It aims to enforce a strict
10 namespace rule to bring consistency to naming of these tunable environment
11 variables across the project. This document is a guide for glibc developers to
12 add tunables to the framework.
17 The TOP_NAMESPACE macro is defined by default as 'glibc'. If distributions
18 intend to add their own tunables, they should do so in a different top
19 namespace by overriding the TOP_NAMESPACE macro for that tunable. Downstream
20 implementations are discouraged from using the 'glibc' top namespace for
21 tunables they don't already have consensus to push upstream.
23 There are two steps to adding a tunable:
27 Modules that wish to use the tunables interface must define the
28 TUNABLE_NAMESPACE macro. Following this, for each tunable you want to
29 add, make an entry in elf/dl-tunables.list. The format of the file is as
35 # tunable attributes, one per line
37 # A tunable with default attributes, i.e. string variable.
48 The list of allowed attributes are:
50 - type: Data type. Defaults to STRING. Allowed types are:
51 INT_32, SIZE_T and STRING.
53 - minval: Optional minimum acceptable value. For a string type
54 this is the minimum length of the value.
56 - maxval: Optional maximum acceptable value. For a string type
57 this is the maximum length of the value.
59 - env_alias: An alias environment variable
61 - is_secure: Specify whether the tunable should be read for setuid
62 binaries. True allows the tunable to be read for
63 setuid binaries while false disables it. Note that
64 even if this is set as true and the value is read, it
65 may not be used if it does not validate against the
66 acceptable values or is not considered safe by the
69 2. Call either the TUNABLE_SET_VALUE and pass into it the tunable name and a
70 pointer to the variable that should be set with the tunable value.
71 If additional work needs to be done after setting the value, use the
72 TUNABLE_SET_VALUE_WITH_CALLBACK instead and additionally pass a pointer to
73 the function that should be called if the tunable value has been set.
78 The framework currently only allows a one-time initialization of variables
79 through environment variables and in some cases, modification of variables via
80 an API call. A future goals for this project include:
82 - Setting system-wide and user-wide defaults for tunables through some
83 mechanism like a configuration file.
85 - Allow tweaking of some tunables at runtime