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I am attempting to link an application with g++ on this debian lenny system and ld is complaining it cannot find specified libraries. The specific example here is image magick, but I am having similar problems with a few other libraries too.

I am calling the link step in the following way:

g++ -w (..lots of .o files/include directories/etc..) \
-L/usr/lib -lmagic

and ld complains:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lmagic

however, libmagic exists:

$ locate libmagic.so
/usr/lib/libmagic.so.1
/usr/lib/libmagic.so.1.0.0
$ ls -all /usr/lib/libmagic.so.1*
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root    17 2008-12-01 03:52 /usr/lib/libmagic.so.1 -> libmagic.so.1.0.0
-rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 84664 2008-09-09 00:05 /usr/lib/libmagic.so.1.0.0
$ ldd /usr/lib/libmagic.so.1.0.0 
	linux-gate.so.1 =>  (0xb7f85000)
	libz.so.1 => /usr/lib/libz.so.1 (0xb7f51000)
	libc.so.6 => /lib/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 (0xb7df6000)
	/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb7f86000)
$ sudo ldconfig -v | grep "libmagic"
	libmagic.so.1 -> libmagic.so.1.0.0

How do I diagnose this problem further, and what could be wrong? Am I doing something completely stupid?

Thanks in advance.

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3 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

The problem is the linker is looking for libmagic.so but you only have libmagic.so.1

A quick hack is to symlink libmagic.so.1 to libmagic.so

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that works, I am kind of perplexed that it would name the file in a completely useless way by default - can you provide any insight why it would do this by default? – maxpenguin Dec 3 '08 at 1:09
Most likely it is a misconfiguration of the install script – grepsedawk Dec 3 '08 at 1:15
The foo.so.1 is a symlink to foo.so.1.0.0 too. This way, you can have several versions of a library in your system, and if an application needs a specific one, it can link to it, while in general, the newest one is chosen by symlink. I do not know why this symlink was missing. – Svante Dec 3 '08 at 1:19
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libmagic.so.1 is the soname, used by the dynamic linker; libmagic.so is used by the linker, and is usually together with the headers in the -dev package. The symlink might be missing because the -dev package was not installed. – CesarB Dec 3 '08 at 10:49
vote up 4 vote down

As just formulated by grepsedawk, the answer lies in the -l option of g++, calling ld. If you look at the man page of this command, you can either do:

  • g++ -l:libmagic.so.1 [...]
  • or: g++ -lmagic [...] , if you have a symlink named libmagic.so in your libs path
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vote up 2 vote down

Unless I'm badly mistaken libmagic or -lmagic is not the same library as Image Magick. You state that you want image magick.

Image Magick comes with a utility to supply all appropriate options to the compiler.

Ex:

g++ program.cpp Magick++-config --cppflags --cxxflags --ldflags --libs -o "prog"

("Magick++-config --cppflags --cxxflags --ldflags --libs" should be surounded by back-ticks wich Stack overflow doesn't seem to support in it's input)

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