6

I am using Eclipse Indigo with an Android/NDK mixed project. I've added C++ nature and almost everything is working. Automatic builds work; that is, when I edit a file ndk-build is invoked and completes successfully - no build errors. Mouseover code assist works (the little window pops up with information about the function). If I place the cursor on an include line and press F3, a relevant header file open (not the one I would expect based on my configuration, but a relevant one - maybe a clue?).

If I select the following line in my .cpp file, it opens $NDKROOT/platform/android-3/arch-arm/usr/include/ctype.h:

#include <ctype.h>

(isdigit is defined in this file)

However, Eclipse insists that isdigit is not defined. I have read many posts suggesting that either the static analyzer or the indexer is to blame, but I've tried many of the suggested solutions to no avail.

If I add a line like the following, the error goes away and mouseover code assist for the function works:

extern int isdigit(int);

Again, this is not a linker error or a compiler error - ndk-build completes with no errors. This is something inside eclipse. Thanks for taking a look!

Edit: I now believe this to be a Code Analysis problem. A better solution is to edit the Code Analysis options to make "Function could not be resolved" be a warning instead of an error. That way you can see the warnings in Problems view, but continue to work. If the function is REALLY missing, the compiler will tell you! I also have a new theory, that the problem is with the Code Analyzer following symlinks, because all of the "missing" functions are in symlinked include files. Would love any input on this theory.

1
  • I'm guessing this will be fixed in Kepler?
    – james82345
    Apr 19, 2013 at 23:49

5 Answers 5

5

After spending several days working on problems like this, I developed the following recipe for dealing with issue.

I hope it helps you or others:

Summary: Usually, your problems in eclipse are due to eclipse configuration problems. The following assumes that your C++ code is building ok with ndk_build or ndk_build.cmd (on windows).

  • No joy with eclipse juno (4.2) and CDT version 8.1. Use eclipse indigo (3.7)

  • Make sure that you have the CDT for indigo installed and enabled (version 8.0X) by looking in the "install new software". It defaults to installed but not enabled on indigo on some downloads.

  • When you are dealing with native code or android config for native code, make sure you are in the C++/C perspective in eclipse, not the java one. It is deceptive, but there is a only a subset of options available in Java perspective. You can be sure you are C++/C perspective if you see "C/C++ general" as a choice when you do "Project > Properties."

  • The usual problem is that the indexer in C/C++-land thinks there are errors when there is not (e.g. building with ndk-build works ok, often you can see this in the console window even). This is caused by bad paths in the "Paths And Symbols" part of "Project > Properties > C/C++ General" on the first tab.

  • To fix the problem, the primary tool is to right-click on the project, select "Index" and "Search for unresolved includes." This will tell what files it can't find--and these are typically not the ones that you have in your files with the little pink mark by them.

  • To find the right file, search in your NDKROOT directory (where you installed NDK). A typical one to add is: ${NDKROOT}/platforms/android-9/arch-arm/usr/include or the right android-N for your android target. There are many copies of the standard include directories in the NDK because of multiple versions of android and copies of the C++ standard libraries.

Two big warnings

  • The "unresolved includes" view in eclipse does not automatically update when you change the indexer configuration on the Properties > C/C++ General/Paths and Settings so be sure to run it again each time. Most views in eclipse do this update properly!

  • Also the little red/pink error markers in the source code views in the eclipse editor don't automatically update either. You have to "touch" the file in some way for it discover that the error is now fixed.

2
  • If you exit eclipse and return sometimes it manages to "forget" the configuration you have set. I have found that deleting an include path (Paths and Symbols) and then replacing it (using "Apply" both times) seems to convince it to remember.
    – Ian Smith
    Jul 20, 2012 at 9:00
  • Thanks for the detailed response, Ian. I gave you an upvote for the relevant useful information, but this didnt help me. ctype.h defines isdigit and is a resolved include, but isdigit remains undefined. I've also tried various tricks (including the delete,apply,add,apply you mentioned) to no avail.
    – ajh158
    Jul 23, 2012 at 13:19
2

I worked around this issue via the approach I suggested in my question and haven't been able to find a better way yet.

2

Perhaps this will help:

  1. Go to Project > Properties
  2. Navigate to C/C++ Build > Settings
  3. Go to GCC C Linker > Miscellaneous settings
  4. Add the following in the Linker flags : -lc
2
  • Tianyi, thanks for your response. Unfortunately this did not help with my problem. I think that my problem is caused by CDT Code Analysis - do linker settings affect CDT Code Analysis? In any case, thanks!
    – ajh158
    Sep 4, 2012 at 12:19
  • "do linker settings affect CDT Code Analysis?" Sorry that I don't know their relationship very well...
    – Tianyi
    Oct 14, 2012 at 13:20
0

Have you tried rebuilding the indexer? (right click project in project explorer index->rebuild) Sometimes that takes care of problem... If you upgraded from an earlier version of eclipse your indexer setup could be a problem -- you might want to try restoring the indexer defaults (preferences c/c++ Indexer)... Hope this helps – this issue can be 'maddening' (seems to happen way to often)

1
  • Thanks for the suggestion - unfortunately, I did previously try rebuilding the index. I also made several changes to indexer prefs (none of which helped) and then reset to default (still no joy).
    – ajh158
    May 29, 2012 at 17:32
0

I had the same problem on Linux with different toolchains. Even the simplest C++ code (like the one create by the hello wizards) would have syntax errors, without aby build problem. As pointed out in another post by Thorbjorn Jemander the problem is in the indexer and it can be eliminated by deselecting the option "Allow heuristic resulution of includes". Explicitely: Winsow -> Preferences -> C/C++ -> Indexer -> deselect the above option.

After that you may see that highlighted errors disappear after you open the file in editor and just click within the editor page...

1
  • 1
    Marcello, thanks for your response. Unfortunately this did not help with the isdigit problem I am having.
    – ajh158
    Aug 7, 2012 at 14:34

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.