vote up 0 vote down star

Hi,

I'm setting up a C++ project, on Ubuntu x64, using Eclipse-CDT. I'm basically doing a hello world and linking to a commerical 3rd party library.

I've included the header files, linked to their libraries, but I still get linker errors. Are there some possible problems here other than the obvious (e.g. I am 99% sure I'm linking to the correct library).

  1. Is there a way to confirm the static libraries I am linking to are 64bit?
  2. Is there a way to confirm that the library has the class (and methods) I am expecting it to have?

Eclipse says:

Building target: LinkProblem
Invoking: GCC C++ Linker
g++ -L/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/target/bin -o"LinkProblem"  ./src/LinkProblem.o   -lsomelib1 -lpthread -lsomelib2 -lsomelib3
./src/LinkProblem.o: In function `main':
/home/notroot/workspace/LinkProblem/Debug/../src/LinkProblem.cpp:17: undefined reference to `SomeClass::close()'
./src/LinkProblem.o: In function `SomeOtherClass':
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:148: undefined reference to `SomeClass::SomeClass()'
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:148: undefined reference to `vtable for SomeOtherClass'
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:151: undefined reference to `SomeClass::~SomeClass()'
./src/LinkProblem.o: In function `~SomeOtherClass':
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:140: undefined reference to `vtable for SomeOtherClass'
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:140: undefined reference to `SomeClass::~SomeClass()'
/home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/include/sql/somefile.h:140: undefined reference to `SomeClass::~SomeClass()'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [LinkProblem] Error 1
flag

Is the 3rd party library 64-bit? – Daniel A. White Jul 7 at 23:06
Yes, it is 64bit. You could be on to something though. How do I ensure my code/project is 64bit? In Visual Studio I created a x64 build config. – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:07
Is there a way to confirm the 3rd party library is 64bit? E.g. inspect the .a files with a tool or something? – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:08
Where is it located? A google shows that there is a semi-convention having it in the /usr/lib64 – Daniel A. White Jul 7 at 23:11
The third party lib files are here: /home/notroot/workspace/somelib-3/somelib/target/bin – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:13
show 4 more comments

1 Answer

vote up 2 vote down check

Assuming those methods are in one of the libs it looks like an ordering problem.

When linking libraries into an executable they are done in the order they are declared.
Also the linker will only take the methods/functions required to resolve currently oustanding dependencies. If a subsequent library then uses methods/functions that were not originally required by the objects you will have missing dependencies.

How it works:

  • Take all the object files and combine them into an executable
  • Resolve any dependecies among object files.
  • Foreach library in order:
    • Check unresolved dependencies and see if the lib resolves them.
    • If so load required part into the executable.

Example:

Objects requires:

  • Open
  • Close
  • BatchRead
  • BatchWrite

Lib 1 provides:

  • Open
  • Close
  • read
  • write

Lib 2 provides

  • BatchRead (but uses lib1:read)
  • BatchWrite (but uses lib1:write)

If linked like this:

gcc -o plop plop.o -l1 -l2

Then the linker will fail to resolve the read and write symbols.

link|flag
Are you referring to the order of the lib files on the G++ command line? – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:14
Yes. :-) – Martin York Jul 7 at 23:20
Thanks, I've tried playing with the order, no luck yet. – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:20
I notice your example uses "gcc" whereas my question uses "g++", should I use "gcc" instead? – Alex Black Jul 7 at 23:21
No use what you were using.If your code contains C++ stuff you will need to use g++ to get the correct standard libraries. – Martin York Jul 7 at 23:25
show 1 more comment

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.