I created a simple opengl file in cpp. It works on the University computer. I'm able to compile the file, but i can not run the compiled file. The error I get is:

Inconsistency detected by ld.so: dl-version.c: 224: _dl_check_map_versions: Assertion `needed != ((void *)0)' failed!

the file code is:

    //
//  Model.cpp
//  cg-projects
//
//  Created by HUJI Computer Graphics course staff, 2013.
//

#include "ShaderIO.h"
#include "Model.h"

#include <GL/glew.h>
#ifdef __APPLE__
#include <OpenGL/OpenGL.h>
#else
#include <GL/gl.h>
#endif

#include <glm/glm.hpp>
#include <glm/gtc/type_ptr.hpp>
#include "glm/gtc/matrix_transform.hpp"

#define SHADERS_DIR "shaders/"

Model::Model() :
_vao(0), _vbo(0)
{

}

Model::~Model()
{
    if (_vao != 0)
        glDeleteVertexArrays(1, &_vao);
    if (_vbo != 0)
        glDeleteBuffers(1, &_vbo);
}

void Model::init()
{
    programManager::sharedInstance()
    .createProgram("default",
                   SHADERS_DIR "SimpleShader.vert",
                   SHADERS_DIR "SimpleShader.frag");

    GLuint program = programManager::sharedInstance().programWithID("default");

    // Obtain uniform variable handles:
    _fillColorUV  = glGetUniformLocation(program, "fillColor");

    // Initialize vertices buffer and transfer it to OpenGL
    {
        // For this example we create a single triangle:
        const float vertices[] = {
            0.75f, 0.75f, 0.0f, 1.0f,
            0.75f, -0.75f, 0.0f, 1.0f,
            -0.75f, -0.75f, 0.0f, 1.0f,
        };

        // Create and bind the object's Vertex Array Object:
        glGenVertexArrays(1, &_vao);
        glBindVertexArray(_vao);

        // Create and load vertex data into a Vertex Buffer Object:
        glGenBuffers(1, &_vbo);
        glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, _vbo);
        glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, sizeof(vertices), vertices, GL_STATIC_DRAW);

        // Tells OpenGL that there is vertex data in this buffer object and what form that vertex data takes:

        // Obtain attribute handles:
        _posAttrib = glGetAttribLocation(program, "position");
        glEnableVertexAttribArray(_posAttrib);
        glVertexAttribPointer(_posAttrib, // attribute handle
                              4,          // number of scalars per vertex
                              GL_FLOAT,   // scalar type
                              GL_FALSE,
                              0,
                              0);

        // Unbind vertex array:
        glBindVertexArray(0);
    }
}

void Model::draw()
{
    // Set the program to be used in subsequent lines:
    GLuint program = programManager::sharedInstance().programWithID("default");
    glUseProgram(program);

    GLenum polygonMode = GL_LINE;   // Also try using GL_FILL and GL_POINT
    glPolygonMode(GL_FRONT_AND_BACK, polygonMode);

    // Set uniform variable with RGB values:
    float red = 0.3f; float green = 0.5f; float blue = 0.7f;
    glUniform4f(_fillColorUV, red, green, blue, 1.0);

    // Draw using the state stored in the Vertex Array object:
    glBindVertexArray(_vao);

    size_t numberOfVertices = 3;
    glDrawArrays(GL_TRIANGLES, 0, numberOfVertices);

    // Unbind the Vertex Array object
    glBindVertexArray(0);

    // Cleanup, not strictly necessary
    glUseProgram(0);
}

void Model::resize(int width, int height)
{
    _width  = width;
    _height = height;
    _offsetX = 0;
    _offsetY = 0;
}

i'm using ubuntu 13.10.

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Asked on the same day by the same user on Ask Ubuntu, which is against community consensus. I suggest this one be closed and the askubuntu not. – Ciro Santilli 709大抓捕 六四事件 法轮功 Jan 7 '14 at 10:42
    
The Ask Ubuntu one was closed. – Ciro Santilli 709大抓捕 六四事件 法轮功 Jan 27 '14 at 23:17

It looks that some thing has changed by some Ubuntu 13.10 sw updates. I had also code that has compiled and run without problem and just one day I started to get same Assertion `needed != ((void *)0)' failed! error but only if I compiled my code again with current gcc/lib versios.

After debugging I found out that the assert error comes from /lib/i386-linux-gnu/ld-2.17.so

      struct link_map *needed = find_needed (strtab + ent->vn_file, map);

  /* If NEEDED is NULL this means a dependency was not found
     and no stub entry was created.  This should never happen.  */
  assert (needed != NULL);

It is said that this should never happen and it does not say what is needed but not found. Some gdb work and i found that it needs libpthread.so.0 . The good question is that why /usr/bin/ld linker linking application and ld.so disagree about need of this library.

I did not intentionally use libpthread but from somewhere i got to my link map reference to __pthread_key_create@@GLIBC_2.0 I don't know where this comes but it may cause need of libpthread.so without adding NEEDED libpthread.so.0 as follows on objdump -p :

Dynamic Section:
 NEEDED               libglut.so.3
 NEEDED               libGLU.so.1
 NEEDED               libGL.so.1
 NEEDED               libstdc++.so.6
 NEEDED               libgcc_s.so.1
 NEEDED               libpthread.so.0
 NEEDED               libc.so.6

I did not find a root cause of this problem but least workaround. You need link your code with -pthread option and have some dummy call to this library .

Define in you Makefile libs

 -lglut -lGLU -lGL -lm  -pthread

Then include some dummy function just refer some libpthread function to make linker link it and you get the NEEDED libpthread.so.0 and then ld.so is hap.

#include <pthread.h>
void junk() {
  int i;
  i=pthread_getconcurrency();
};

This helped for me, i hope that it helps.

There is more analysis in Ubuntu launcpad https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-graphics-drivers-319/+bug/1248642?comments=all

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1  
thanks for the solutions. this worked for me also. however, an 'l' needs to be added to -pthread, thus it should be -lglut -lGLU -lGL -lm -lpthread. Unfortunately I couldn't edit the post, so I left a comment. – antibus Aug 26 '14 at 14:19
    
I have an executable that uses Intel Threading Building Blocks (TBB), which uses pthreads, that would exhibit the same ld.so error. I forgot to add the -pthread flag to my linker command. Thanks, you saved me hours of work. – Steven Darnell Mar 4 '15 at 19:59

If you have an nvidia graphics card like mine, this might work for you


    g++ -L/usr/lib/nvidia-304/ your-file.cc -lglut -lGLEW -lGL

Replace the 304 with the nvidia driver version. More details about this bug can be found at this link.

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Thanks so much for this! This folder contains another GL library. I am guessing that prior to adding this Library folder explicitely, there was confusion as to which GL library to use... Anyway, this also solved it for me. – Harry Apr 11 '14 at 14:47
    
This worked for me too. I am using nvidia-340, but your fix worked :). Thanks. – krishnab Aug 22 '14 at 8:42
    
Thanks so f*cking much !! Saved my life! – Evdzhan Mustafa Oct 12 '15 at 0:01

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