Here's a Minimal, Reproducible Example that exhibits the same problem that you experienced. I created a C library exporting a simple addition function. I also created a Cargo project to use this function.
dynlink/
├── executable
│ ├── build.rs
│ ├── Cargo.lock
│ ├── Cargo.toml
│ └── src
│ └── main.rs
└── library
├── awesome_math.c
└── libawesome_math.so
awesome_math.c
#include <stdint.h>
uint8_t from_the_library(uint8_t a, uint8_t b) {
return a + b;
}
The library was compiled as gcc -g -shared awesome_math.c -o libawesome_math.so
.
src/main.rs
extern {
fn from_the_library(a: u8, b: u8) -> u8;
}
fn main() {
unsafe {
println!("Adding: {}", from_the_library(1, 2));
}
}
build.rs
fn main() {
println!("cargo:rustc-link-lib=dylib=awesome_math");
println!("cargo:rustc-link-search=native=/home/shep/rust/dynlink/library");
}
Cargo.toml
[package]
name = "executable"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
[profile.dev]
rpath = true
Investigating further, I asked the Rust compiler to print out the linker args it was going to use:
cargo rustc -- --print link-args
This printed out a bunch of stuff, but an important line was:
"-Wl,-rpath,$ORIGIN/../../../../../../.rustup/toolchains/nightly-aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib"
This is a directive to the linker to add specific values to the rpath of the finished binary. Missing is any reference to the dynamic library that we are linking to. In retrospect, this probably makes sense, as how would the compiler know that we want to include it in the rpath?
A workaround is to add another directive to the linker. There are interesting options (like $ORIGIN
), but for simplicity, we will just use an absolute path:
cargo rustc -- -C link-args="-Wl,-rpath,/home/shep/rust/dynlink/library/"
And the resulting binary prints the right thing for ldd
and runs without setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH
:
$ ldd ./target/debug/executable | grep awesome
libawesome_math.so => /home/shep/rust/dynlink/library/libawesome_math.so (0x0000ffffb1e56000)
$ ./target/debug/executable
Adding: 3
Turning to making it relative, we can use $ORIGIN
:
cargo rustc -- -C link-args='-Wl,-rpath,$ORIGIN/../../../library/'
Be careful to escape $ORIGIN
properly for your shell, and remember that the path is relative to the executable, not the current working directory.
See also:
/etc/ld.so.conf
and runningldconfig
not work for you? (Or failing that, setting theLD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable?)rpath
is something that Rust can control (more accurately that Rust instructs the linker to deal with).cargo clean
andcargo build --verbose
. Then see if anrpath
option is passed when the executable is linked.