vote up 4 vote down star

I'm trying to compile a simple app with gcov and getting the following link errors:

gcc AllTests.o CuTestTest.o CuTest.o -o TestTest
AllTests.o: In function `global constructors keyed to 0_RunAllTests':
/home/p7539c/cutest/AllTests.c:26: undefined reference to `__gcov_init'
AllTests.o:(.data+0x44): undefined reference to `__gcov_merge_add'
CuTestTest.o: In function `global constructors keyed to 0_TestCuStringNew':
/home/p7539c/cutest/CuTestTest.c:30: undefined reference to `__gcov_init'
CuTestTest.o:(.data+0x64): undefined reference to `__gcov_merge_add'
CuTest.o: In function `global constructors keyed to 0_CuStrAlloc':
/home/p7539c/cutest/CuTest.c:379: undefined reference to `__gcov_init'
CuTest.o:(.data+0x184): undefined reference to `__gcov_merge_add'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [TestTest] Error 1

I can't seem to find th elocation of the missing symbols. gcov is present on the machine running gcc version 4.1.2

Any ideas? Thanks.

On Edit:

Everything seems to work fine when using gcov with an application that consists of one .c file. When I have multiple .c files (hence multiple .o files) I have the above problem.

The compile steps look like the following:

cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g   -c -o AllTests.o AllTests.c
cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g   -c -o CuTestTest.o CuTestTest.c
cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g   -c -o CuTest.o CuTest.c
flag

5 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

I tried a simple test file with gcc -ftest-coverage -fprofile-arcs test.c and had no problems like you describe.

I suspect that gcc brings in the gcov library if the -ftest-coverage flag is there when it is linking. Try passing that flag on your gcc command line.

link|flag
Tried that with a single file application and it works. I'm having problems with my multi-file application. It compiles fine, but seems to get confused linking. – john146 Feb 19 at 20:21
p7539c@localhost cutest> make cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g -c -o AllTests.o AllTests.c cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g -c -o CuTestTest.o CuTestTest.c cc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -g -c -o CuTest.o CuTest.c gcc AllTests.o CuTestTest.o CuTest.o -o TestTest – john146 Feb 19 at 20:21
You are still not passing the -ftest-coverage parameter in the final call to gcc. You need to specify it when linking too. – flodin Feb 20 at 7:59
vote up 2 vote down

I just spent an incredible amount of time debugging a very similar error. Here's what I learned:

  • You have to pass -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage when compiling.
  • You have to pass -fprofile-arcs when linking.
  • You can still get weird linker errors when linking. They'll look like this:

    libname.a(objfile.o):(.ctors+0x0): undefined reference to `global constructors keyed to long_name_of_file_and_function'

This means that gconv's having problem with one of your compiler-generated constructors (in my case, a copy-constructor). Check the function mentioned in the error message, see what kinds of objects it copy-constructs, and see if any of those classes doesn't have a copy constructor. Add one, and the error will go away.

Edit: Whether or not you optimize can also affect this. Try turing on / switching off optimizations if you're having problems with it.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The flag you're looking for is -lgcov when linking. That is, change:

gcc AllTests.o CuTestTest.o CuTest.o -o TestTest

to

gcc -lgcov AllTests.o CuTestTest.o CuTest.o -o TestTest
link|flag
-fprofile-arcs implies -lgcov – slicedlime May 18 at 19:06
vote up 0 vote down

Hi,

I have the similar problem where when compiling and linking, it gives me

undefined reference to `__gcov_init' and followed by

undefined reference to `__gcov_merge_add'

and undefined reference to `global constructors keyed to long_name_of_file_and_function'

I tried the above suggestion by adding -lgcov in the linking part. Alternatively, I have also tried with -fprofile-arcs in the linking part. However, the same error still appear.

Any insight to this? When I remove those flags and instead just compile usually with gcc, it does not complain.

Please help.

Thanks.

link|flag
vote up -1 vote down

So I added -shared to the CFLAGS, and now it seems to work with multiple files. Of course, it's coring in a strange place, so I don't know what that's about yet.

link|flag

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