In a nutshell: compiling and linking c++ program that embeds lua using command g++ -o clua clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
, getting liblua5.1.so: undefined reference to 'dlopen'
, among others.
I've been unsuccessfully trying to embed any scripting language in my c++ game for a few weeks now, going from V8 through Python and Squirrel. Lua is marketed as "easy to setup, small", etc, so I figured I'd go with that.
I've gotten the precompiled lua binaries from http://sourceforge.net/projects/luabinaries/files/5.1.5/Linux%20Libraries/ (I used lua-5.1.5_Linux26g4_lib.tar.gz for my 32bit ubuntu 13.something) and have a simple example program:
extern "C" {
#include "lua.h"
#include "lualib.h"
#include "lauxlib.h"
}
int main()
{
lua_State *L = lua_open();
// load the libs
luaL_openlibs(L);
//run a Lua scrip here
luaL_dofile(L,"foo.lua");
printf("\nI am done with Lua in C++.\n");
lua_close(L);
return 0;
}
that is saved as "clua.cpp" and placed in the extracted folder (so that it is in the same directory as "liblua5.1.a" and "liblua5.1.so" and the lua header files are in a folder called "include"). Now, I'm trying to compile the program with the console, using g++, this is the exact command:
g++ -o clua clua.cpp -c -Wall -Iinclude
And it runs flawlessly, produces no errors, and creates a binary file "clua" as expected. When I try to link however:
g++ -o clua clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
I get:
liblua5.1.so: undefined reference to `dlopen'
liblua5.1.so: undefined reference to `dlclose'
liblua5.1.so: undefined reference to `dlerror'
liblua5.1.so: undefined reference to `dlsym'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
I have read lots of responses to people having similar questions, options presented are:
- adding "-ldl", no effect there
- making sure "-ldl" is last, did that too
https://projects.coin-or.org/Ipopt/ticket/230 said adding
LDFLAGS="-Wl,--no-as-needed"
or--enable-dependency-linking
should do the trick, now, I was not sure exactly how my command was supposed to look, whether to putg++ -o clua LDFLAGS="-Wl,--no-as-needed" clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
or
g++ -o clua -Wl --no-as-needed clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
,
g++ --enable-dependency-linking -o clua clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
or
g++ -o clua clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl --enable-dependency-linking
but all those gave errors like:
cc1plus: error: unknown pass dependency-linking specified in -fenable
https://projects.coin-or.org/Ipopt/ticket/229 said: "Another workaround would be to add the configure flag --disable-pthread-mumps", I did that:
g++ -o clua --disable-pthread-mumps clua.cpp -Wall -Iinclude -L liblua5.1.a liblua5.1.so -ldl
and got
cc1plus: error: unknown pass pthread-mumps specified in -fdisable
I was running this all from the directory where clua.cpp, liblua5.1.a and liblua5.1.so was, and there was a folder in there named "include" containing headers. I'm running this on 32bit Ubuntu 13.(10, I think).
Now, what can I do to link Lua properly?
premake4.lua
. The problem might be as simple, as that you are just writing wrong flags for gcc-DLUA_USE_LINUX
. If you don't need to dynamically load C libraries for Lua, you can disable it inluaconf.h
and avoid-ldl
.