I'm using Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex) and compiling C++ files with GCC, but when I compile, gcc makes an a.out
file that is the executable. How can I make Linux executables?
3 Answers
That executable is a "Linux executable" - that is, it's executable on any recent Linux system. You can rename the file to what you want using
rename a.out your-executable-name
or better yet, tell GCC where to put its output file using
gcc -o your-executable-name your-source-file.c
Keep in mind that before Linux systems will let you run the file, you may need to set its "executable bit":
chmod +x your-executable-name
Also remember that on Linux, the extension of the file has very little to do with what it actually is - your executable can be named something
, something.out
, or even something.exe
, and as long as it's produced by GCC and you do chmod +x
on the file, you can run it as a Linux executable.
-
4Doesn't gcc (in fact the linker it calls) already set the executable bit in its output file?– CesarBJul 17, 2009 at 0:58
-
2@CesarB: Yes, the gcc call makes 'your-executable-name' executable by default.– quarkJul 17, 2009 at 1:04
-
1Some systems might have a
rename
command, butmv
is the usual way to rename a file. Apr 1, 2018 at 20:52 -
To create an executable called myprog
, you can call gcc like this:
gcc -c -o myprog something.c
You could also just rename the *.out file gcc generates to the desired name.
That is the executable. If you don't like a.out, you can pass an -o flag to the compiler. If the executable isn't marked with an executable bit, you need to do so yourself:
chmod u+x ./a.out
./a.out
-
The *.out file already is an executable, but how i can build a native Linux executable, linux native executables don't have extensions. Jul 17, 2009 at 0:40
-
5In linux, extensions don't matter. You can just rename the file to anything you like.– notnoopJul 17, 2009 at 0:41
-
*.out
files are the executables. Do you need another type of executables?a.out
, not*.out
. (Greetings from the future!)a.out
should already be executable. No need to do anything else. Just run with./a.out