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I've successfully installed libcurl on a system and a non-root user, using the following configure flags:

./configure --prefix=/path/to/lib --exec-prefix=/path/to/lib --bindir=/path/to/lib

Everything works running compilation as follows:

gcc -I/path/to/include -L/path/to/lib/ client.c -lcurl -o client

The issue comes when I try to run the resulting program. I get the following error:

client: error while loading shared libraries: libcurl.so.4: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

I've googled around a bit and found that it has been reported (and rejected) as a bug here, but I'm still not clear how to resolve the issue. Using ldconfig as suggested in the response would require root permissions, which I obviously do not have.

Is there something I can do to make this all work? It seems like this should be simple, but if it is then I'm completely missing it...

2 Answers 2

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If you don't want to rely on an environment variable, you can use rpath:

gcc -I/path/to/include -L/path/to/lib/ client.c -lcurl -Wl,-rpath,/path/to/lib -o client

This will hardcode /path/to/lib in the executable so that the dynamic linker will search for your .so there first.

(Please also note that in the general case, using -rpath is considered to be bad practice: if the RPATH directory is writable by anyone else than root, it can lead to security issues.)

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Set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to dynamically tell your program where to look for shared libraries. In your case, with Bourne/bash shell, you might do something like:

$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/path/too/lib
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
$ ./client

See Shared libraries HOWTO for more information. Note also that generally, you shouldn't consider LD_LIBRARY_PATH a production solution: you'll eventually want to get your sysadmin to configure system load paths or install your library in the correct locations.

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  • I wish I could mark both of yours as the right answer. The rpath option ended up being the best for this specific problem, but it's good to know I can use env variables to do the same thing.
    – Dan
    Nov 23, 2012 at 7:47
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    I totallly forgot about rpath! @Schnouki has the right solution, you marked the right one. :-)
    – ckhan
    Nov 23, 2012 at 8:05

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