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  On some architectures, when the kernel loads any userspace program it
  maps an ELF DSO into that program's address space.  This DSO is called
  the vDSO and it often contains useful and highly-optimized alternatives
  to real syscalls.
  
  These functions are called just like ordinary C function according to
  your platform's ABI.  Call them from a sensible context.  (For example,
  if you set CS on x86 to something strange, the vDSO functions are
  within their rights to crash.)  In addition, if you pass a bad
  pointer to a vDSO function, you might get SIGSEGV instead of -EFAULT.
  
  To find the DSO, parse the auxiliary vector passed to the program's
  entry point.  The AT_SYSINFO_EHDR entry will point to the vDSO.
  
  The vDSO uses symbol versioning; whenever you request a symbol from the
  vDSO, specify the version you are expecting.
  
  Programs that dynamically link to glibc will use the vDSO automatically.
  Otherwise, you can use the reference parser in Documentation/vDSO/parse_vdso.c.
  
  Unless otherwise noted, the set of symbols with any given version and the
  ABI of those symbols is considered stable.  It may vary across architectures,
  though.
  
  (As of this writing, this ABI documentation as been confirmed for x86_64.
   The maintainers of the other vDSO-using architectures should confirm
   that it is correct for their architecture.)