Just upgraded to Snow Leopard, installed Xcode 3.2, then installed iPhone SDK 3 for SL.
In a project, I now get the following error on build:
ld: library not found for -lcrt1.10.6.o
I've searched around the net, but nothing helpful can be found.
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Just upgraded to Snow Leopard, installed Xcode 3.2, then installed iPhone SDK 3 for SL. In a project, I now get the following error on build: ld: library not found for -lcrt1.10.6.o I've searched around the net, but nothing helpful can be found. |
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Edit Project Settings -> In the build tab -> For Mac OS X Deployment Target, change it to 10.5 for XCode 3 (not 10.6 even if on 10.6) and see if that helps. For XCode 4, you'll need to set it to 10.6 P.S. Make sure you set that for all targets, not just release or debug. (if you didn't, one would fail, the other wouldn't) |
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Add the following to ~/.profile (for Mac OS X 10.5):
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I was able to fix this problem by adding the following to my Makefile:
Ostensibly, this is only required when building outside of Xcode. This problem frustrated me long enough that I figured it would be useful to share my experience here. |
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It looks like you're picking up libraries from /usr/lib, which is wholly inappropriate for the iPhone SDK. I would assume you've changed your build settings to add /usr/lib to the library search paths. This should be completely unnecessary in the first place, as /usr/lib is in the compiler's standard search paths, but if you need to have a modified search path like this, make sure to use |
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Setting deployment target to compiler defaults solved the problem. Don't change anything else. |
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Wasted few hours on this one... Interestingly, for me the problem was only for Simulator-Debug. It wasnt complaining for Simulator-Release or Device Debug/Release! anyway, Changing Deployment Target to 10.5 solved this for me!! |
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Add the following to ~/.profile (for Mac OS X 10.5): Stefan, thank you so much for your answer. I've no idea why your post has a -1, but given Kirandan's limited scenario (Snow Leopard, Xcode 3.2.1, iphone, library path error), I can vouch for your answer and say it is correct and works perfectly for almost this same scenario, except my exception was with 10.5 (-lcrt1.10.5.o). This fixed an issue I had compiling snort with gcc, which is included with XCode. So it may not work for everybody, however it should fix the issue with at least one other "answer" on this page, from "oohmygood", who is missing this same library, and thus I can perhaps understand at least 1 point, certainly not the -1, because of the general nature of the question, and Stefan's answer is as good as any on this page, where a library is not in your path. Elsewhere, I'd seen an answer by Gabor Cselle (author of reMail), and he fixed this specific issue by using a symbolic link (someone referenced this page, by the way), but he noted this was not the best way - I think Stefan's solution is better and certainly fixed my issue. |
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This problem solved by setting Mac OS X Deployment Target to 10.5 and after this set back to Compiler Default :) |
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I had this problem when I was using Xcode 4 on one machine and Xcode 3.2.6 on another. The two versions are supposed to be able to swap .xcodeproj files between them but I found that in the project.pbxproj file (inside the .xcodeproj directory), there were still a couple of places that read:
I quit Xcode and went and changed the three occurrences to:
After reopening the project, I could build again. Whew! |
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I had the same error message, none of the above solutions worked for me. I resolved it by deleting the *.pbxuser and *.mode1v3 files inside the xcodeproj file.
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I had the same issue in a Fortran Makefile. Added the following option after the compiler (For OSX 10.5): -L/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.sdk/usr/lib e.g., g77 -L/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.sdk/usr/lib Now the compiler will find the library you want ! |
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The compiler normally uses crt1.o combined with crt[i/n].o and crt[begin/end].o to support the constructors and destructors (functions called before and after main and exit). This error could be caused by this missing library file for the specific deployment target. First, do some investigation, like:
You could see something like:
So as you can see, crt1.10.6.o is missing for MacOSX10.5. Solution 1: You can solve that by creating the link to the missing file pointed to the other environment, or you could change your deployment target. E.g.
Also this could be caused, that you have different gcc installed in your system. See:
Solution 2 So when you're compiling using make, you can actually specify the right compiler by CC variable. E.g.
Solution 3 What you can also try is specifying the right target deployment environment variable for gcc, e.g.:
If this works, then you can add this library path to your shell profile (~/.profile). E.g.
Or by temporary exporting them How to test Create the example
And try to compile it via:
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