646

I'm trying to compile my program and it returns this error :

usr/bin/ld: cannot find -l<nameOfTheLibrary>

in my makefile I use the command g++ and link to my library which is a symbolic link to my library located on an other directory.

Is there an option to add to make it work please?

9
  • 1
    Need more info. What command did you issue to compile your program? You can use make -n your-target to have make just print the commands it would normally invoke
    – djf
    May 23, 2013 at 9:26
  • Post the makefile or the command you execute. May 23, 2013 at 9:38
  • my command is this one : g++ -<options> objetc1.o objetc2.o objetc3.o objetc4.o -L<pathOfTheLibrary> -l<nameOfTheLibrary> -lpthread -o myexe
    – ZoOo
    May 23, 2013 at 9:38
  • 4
    Is the library you want to link with built with the same architecture(eg. 32/64 bit)? Is the library you want to link with a custom library? The library name matters, since it has to start with lib<name> when using the -l switch (eg. libpthread.so you are already linking with). May 23, 2013 at 10:10
  • 1
    The problem was on my symbolic link on the library which wasn't good ! Thanks for your help !
    – ZoOo
    May 23, 2013 at 11:16

16 Answers 16

664

To figure out what the linker is looking for, run it in verbose mode.

For example, I encountered this issue while trying to compile MySQL with ZLIB support. I was receiving an error like this during compilation:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lzlib

I did some Googl'ing and kept coming across different issues of the same kind where people would say to make sure the .so file actually exists and if it doesn't, then create a symlink to the versioned file, for example, zlib.so.1.2.8. But, when I checked, zlib.so DID exist. So, I thought, surely that couldn't be the problem.

I came across another post on the Internets that suggested to run make with LD_DEBUG=all:

LD_DEBUG=all make

Although I got a TON of debugging output, it wasn't actually helpful. It added more confusion than anything else. So, I was about to give up.

Then, I had an epiphany. I thought to actually check the help text for the ld command:

ld --help

From that, I figured out how to run ld in verbose mode (imagine that):

ld -lzlib --verbose

This is the output I got:

==================================================
attempt to open /usr/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib64/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib64/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /usr/local/lib64/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/local/lib64/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /lib64/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /lib64/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /usr/lib64/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/lib64/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /usr/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/x86_64-linux-gnu/lib/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /usr/local/lib/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/local/lib/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /lib/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /lib/libzlib.a failed
attempt to open /usr/lib/libzlib.so failed
attempt to open /usr/lib/libzlib.a failed
/usr/bin/ld.bfd.real: cannot find -lzlib

Ding, ding, ding...

So, to finally fix it so I could compile MySQL with my own version of ZLIB (rather than the bundled version):

sudo ln -s /usr/lib/libz.so.1.2.8 /usr/lib/libzlib.so

Voila!

23
  • 86
    Thanks, this was helpful. For others using gcc to compile and link their program (rather than using ld directly), you can add -Xlinker --verbose to gcc's command-line arguments to have it pass this option to ld.
    – user473305
    Feb 12, 2014 at 11:04
  • 7
    This also helped me. The Makefile I had was only expecting static libraries so it used -Wl,-Bstatic. This limits the search to .a files only. The verbose option showed this clearly. Once I removed -Wl,-Bstatic shared libraries were also searched.
    – micah94
    Feb 23, 2014 at 1:21
  • 2
    I'm on FreeBSD 10. The new LLVM Clang cc takes an argument of the form -Wl,--verbose and passes --verbose to the linker. May 12, 2014 at 2:32
  • 10
    Now that's what I call a perfect answer! Thanks a lot. It saved a lot of time. Just to add to help someone like me. It can be used to debug path related issues as well. Make sure you check the path with -L<path to directory> with command, ld -L<path> -l<library name> --verbose
    – sbhatt
    Mar 9, 2015 at 20:09
  • 3
    @EdwardBlack See this answer. Essentially, for gcc, just add -Wl,--verbose to pass verbose to the linker.
    – chembrad
    Sep 9, 2015 at 19:50
253

If your library name is say libxyz.so and it is located on path say:

/home/user/myDir

then to link it to your program:

g++ -L/home/user/myDir -lxyz myprog.cpp -o myprog
11
  • 15
    my library is not a dynamic one (.so) but a static one (.a). Does the problem come from that?
    – ZoOo
    May 23, 2013 at 9:41
  • 4
    @ZoOo that shouldn't normally matter, the linker can work with either one
    – djf
    May 23, 2013 at 9:48
  • 8
    another way to link your library is that you can directly specify the name of the library with complete path, like g++ .. /path/mylib.a May 23, 2013 at 9:52
  • 4
    Yes but it still doesn't work. My library is a symbolic link, i think the problem come from that because when i use the library in the other directory it works !
    – ZoOo
    May 23, 2013 at 10:02
  • 2
    Is your symbolic link correctly pointing to the library at actual location??. can you post the output of "ll" on the symbolic link. May 23, 2013 at 10:21
84

There does not seem to be any answer which addresses the very common beginner problem of failing to install the required library in the first place.

On Debianish platforms, if libfoo is missing, you can frequently install it with something like

apt-get install libfoo-dev

The -dev version of the package is required for development work, even trivial development work such as compiling source code to link to the library.

The package name will sometimes require some decorations (libfoo0-dev? foo-dev without the lib prefix? etc), or you can simply use your distro's package search to find out precisely which packages provide a particular file.

(If there is more than one, you will need to find out what their differences are. Picking the coolest or the most popular is a common shortcut, but not an acceptable procedure for any serious development work.)

For other architectures (most notably RPM) similar procedures apply, though the details will be different.

5
  • 5
    This just helped me with an issue I was having with a fresh server and Perl. apt-get install libperl-dev sorted it for me. Thanks :) Mar 27, 2017 at 16:58
  • 1
    This! No need to mess with the Makefile May 15, 2017 at 17:36
  • This is probably the most common solution and helped me compile cacti-spine on CentOS 7. A simple yum install openssl-devel solved it.
    – djluko
    May 30, 2017 at 6:21
  • 1
    This is the best fix if you find the symlink ending in .so is missing, but you have a symlink such as libfoo.so.6 --> libfoo.so.6.0.2 (for example), rather than making the symlink by hand. (meaning you have package libfoo installed, but not libfoo-dev)
    – dmaestro12
    Jun 23, 2018 at 17:29
  • 3
    Thanks for this! I would also like to add for beginners: 1. apt install <package_name> != apt install <library_for_gcc_name> That's to say: 1. apt install sqlite3 != apt install libsqlite3-dev and 2. apt install dbus != apt install libdbus-1-dev libdbus-glib-1-dev You have to make sure it's the library for gcc!
    – John Huynh
    Mar 29, 2023 at 2:49
79

Compile Time

When g++ says cannot find -l<nameOfTheLibrary>, it means that g++ looked for the file lib{nameOfTheLibrary}.so, but it couldn't find it in the shared library search path, which by default points to /usr/lib and /usr/local/lib and somewhere else maybe.

To resolve this problem, you should either provide the library file (lib{nameOfTheLibrary}.so) in those search paths or use -L command option. -L{path} tells the g++ (actually ld) to find library files in path {path} in addition to default paths.

Example: Assuming you have a library at /home/taylor/libswift.so, and you want to link your app to this library. In this case you should supply the g++ with the following options:

g++ main.cpp -o main -L/home/taylor -lswift
  • Note 1: -l option gets the library name without lib and .so at its beginning and end.

  • Note 2: In some cases, the library file name is followed by its version, for instance libswift.so.1.2. In these cases, g++ also cannot find the library file. A simple workaround to fix this is creating a symbolic link to libswift.so.1.2 called libswift.so.


Runtime

When you link your app to a shared library, it's required that library stays available whenever you run the app. In runtime your app (actually dynamic linker) looks for its libraries in LD_LIBRARY_PATH. It's an environment variable which stores a list of paths.

Example: In case of our libswift.so example, dynamic linker cannot find libswift.so in LD_LIBRARY_PATH (which points to default search paths). To fix the problem you should append that variable with the path libswift.so is in.

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/home/taylor
3
  • Thanks for your post! I have been ignoring all the answers till the moment when I copied .so files to /usr/lib, but it became interesting for me whether export will help. Despite installation process after make continued longer, another error occured. This time, .so.0 file was not found, but both .so and .so.0 file were in the directory where I have build dependent package from source. Could you help with that?
    – A.Ametov
    Jan 24, 2020 at 10:29
  • Also note, that library name is also case censitive. I tried to link library OpenCl and no success, but library OpenCL works fine :)
    – Alexey
    Sep 9, 2022 at 9:10
  • @frogatto: what a post man. I really learned something today. thank you. Sep 6, 2023 at 11:36
45

During compilation with g++ via make define LIBRARY_PATH if it may not be appropriate to change the Makefile with the -Loption. I had put my extra library in /opt/lib so I did:

$ export LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/lib/

and then ran make for successful compilation and linking.

To run the program with a shared library define:

$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/lib/

before executing the program.

25

First, you need to know the naming rule of lxxx:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lc
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lltdl
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lXtst

lc means libc.so, lltdl means libltdl.so, lXtst means libXts.so.

So, it is lib + lib-name + .so


Once we know the name, we can use locate to find the path of this lxxx.so file.

$ locate libiconv.so
/home/user/anaconda3/lib/libiconv.so   # <-- right here
/home/user/anaconda3/lib/libiconv.so.2
/home/user/anaconda3/lib/libiconv.so.2.5.1
/home/user/anaconda3/lib/preloadable_libiconv.so
/home/user/anaconda3/pkgs/libiconv-1.14-0/lib/libiconv.so
/home/user/anaconda3/pkgs/libiconv-1.14-0/lib/libiconv.so.2
/home/user/anaconda3/pkgs/libiconv-1.14-0/lib/libiconv.so.2.5.1
/home/user/anaconda3/pkgs/libiconv-1.14-0/lib/preloadable_libiconv.so

If you cannot find it, you need to install it by yum (I use CentOS). Usually you have this file, but it does not link to right place.


Link it to the right place, usually it is /lib64 or /usr/lib64

$ sudo ln -s /home/user/anaconda3/lib/libiconv.so /usr/lib64/

Done!

ref: https://i-pogo.blogspot.jp/2010/01/usrbinld-cannot-find-lxxx.html

2
  • 5
    locate only works if it is installed and running regularly. A crude workaround is to run find on your entire disk, but of course, it will take time. If you find yourself doing that frequently, consider installing locate just to lower the (interactive, human) cost of this operation.
    – tripleee
    Nov 27, 2017 at 13:44
  • Thx your answer clued me in on what was going wrong. I created soft links to the "missing" libXXX.so files. ex: ln -s libasound.so.2 libasound.so
    – RyanNerd
    Sep 11, 2021 at 21:47
7

When you compile your program you must supply the path to the library; in g++ use the -L option:

g++ myprogram.cc -o myprogram -lmylib -L/path/foo/bar
1
  • 1
    Which property do we have to change in ccmake so that the Makefile is created with the linked flag? I want to link my -lARToolkitPlus flag to a path.
    – Shashwat
    Sep 18, 2014 at 11:40
5

I had this problem with compiling LXC on a fresh VM with Centos 7.8. I tried all the above and failed. Some suggested removing the -static flag from the compiler configuration but I didn't want to change anything.

The only thing that helped was to install glibc-static and retry. Hope that helps someone.

2
  • Saved me as well! :D
    – agelosnm
    Nov 26, 2021 at 14:25
  • Damnit, i can't find glibc-static anywhere in debian / n00buntu repository.
    – Owl
    Mar 8, 2023 at 16:41
4

Here is Ubuntu information of my laptop.

lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Description:    Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS
Release:    18.04
Codename:   bionic

I use locate to find the .so files for boost_filesystem and boost_system

locate libboost_filesystem
locate libboost_system

Then link .so files to /usr/lib and rename to .so

sudo ln -s /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libboost_filesystem.so.1.65.1 /usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.so
sudo ln -s /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libboost_system.so.1.65.1 /usr/lib/libboost_system.so

Done! R package velocyto.R was successfully installed!

1
  • You should not be manually manipulating anything in /usr/lib; this directory should be entirely managed by your package manager.
    – tripleee
    May 17, 2023 at 4:16
3

Check the location of your library, for example lxxx.so:

locate lxxx.so

If it is not in the /usr/lib folder, type this:

sudo cp yourpath/lxxx.so /usr/lib

Done.

2
  • 7
    You need to exercise caution in copying libraries to system directories.
    – Paul Floyd
    Mar 29, 2018 at 15:01
  • In other words, don't mess with /usr/lib at all; on most modern platforms, this directory (all of /usr except /usr/local) is owned and managed by the OS; in the best case, your manual changes could be lost in the next update, and in the worst case, you are messing up the state of the system to the point where it cannot be reliably updated.
    – tripleee
    Jan 2 at 7:52
3

Apart from the answers already given, it may also be the case that the *.so file exists but is not named properly. Or it may be the case that *.so file exists but it is owned by another user / root.

Issue 1: Improper name

If you are linking the file as -l<nameOfLibrary> then library file name MUST be of the form lib<nameOfLibrary> If you only have <nameOfLibrary>.so file, rename it!

Issue 2: Wrong owner

To verify that this is not the problem - do

ls -l /path/to/.so/file

If the file is owned by root or another user, you need to do

sudo chown yourUserName:yourUserName /path/to/.so/file
1
  • System files should obviously not be owned by yourself. The ownership discussion seems spurious anyway; the main concern is that the library needs to be world-readable (and, for security reasons, not world-writable).
    – tripleee
    May 17, 2023 at 4:17
2

This error may also be brought about if the symbolic link is to a dynamic library, .so, but for legacy reasons -static appears among the link flags. If so, try removing it.

0
2

The library I was trying to link to turned out to have a non-standard name (i.e. wasn't prefixed with 'lib'), so they recommended using a command like this to compile it -

gcc test.c -Iinclude lib/cspice.a -lm

1
  • Only prefixing with "lib" to get a standard name fixed it for me Feb 25, 2019 at 17:34
1

I encountered the same error message.

I built the cmocka as a so and tried to link it to my executable. But ld always complains below:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lcmocka

It turns out that there are 3 files generated after cmocka is built:

  1. libcmocka.so
  2. libcmocka.so.0
  3. libcmocka.so.0.7.0

1 and 2 are symbol links and only 3 is the real file.

I only copied the 1 to my library folder, where ld failed to find the 3.

After I copied all 3, ld works.

1
  • 3
    Can you provide say please what folder do you mean under "my library folder"?
    – A.Ametov
    Jan 24, 2020 at 10:23
0

I was using g++ for linking, and for me it made a difference where the linker options are positioned in the overall command-line.

The following command produced linker errors:

# Wrong order!
g++ \
  -L/some/lib/path -lz -lboost_system -lboost_iostreams -lboost_program_options \
  -o myBinary fileA.o fileB.o fileC.o

Instead, I had to put the linker options after the -o and object files:

# Correct order.
g++ \
  -o myBinary fileA.o fileB.o fileC.o \
  -L/some/lib/path -lz -lboost_system -lboost_iostreams -lboost_program_options

Note that the documentation says, that the order matters for the -l option:

It makes a difference where in the command you write this option; the linker searches and processes libraries and object files in the order they are specified. Thus, ‘foo.o -lz bar.o’ searches library ‘z’ after file foo.o but before bar.o. If bar.o refers to functions in ‘z’, those functions may not be loaded.

This means, the actual position that is needed might depend on the actual linking that you want to do.

Furthermore, this seems also to apply to the -L option. For instance, with my code I had to allow for static linking. For the static link-command I had to put the -L options before the -o, while the -l options went at the very end of the command.

0

Subtle thing for me when working with Golang C FFI and Rust extern C was:

Even though the result .so lib may be called something like libmy_project.so, filename specified with -L should actually only contain l instead of lib, like so:

#cgo LDFLAGS: -L. -lmy_project.so  // -> Good
#cgo LDFLAGS: -L. -libmy_project.so // -> Erro: No such file or directory

It can be noticed when running ld -lib_name --verbose command from @dcarrith answer

That thing ate so much of my time, hope it helps

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