2

I have a windows executable project that links against a static library (.lib) built with GCC 6 (MinGW). The following error occurs during compilation:

LNK2019 unresolved external symbol __popcountdi2 referenced in function ...

The symbol is linked in as a result of using a GCC built-in function __builtin_popcount(), which resides in libgcc. However, despite adding -static-libgcc as an argument to gcc, the problem still persists.

Is there a way for my library (.lib) to contain parts of libgcc rather than requiring libgcc to be on the system for an executable to link against? Is some way around having to ship the library with libgcc?

__builtin_popcount() is not the only built-in function that I'm currently using. The library makes use of __builtin_bswap32(), which doesn't seem to run into this issue.

I'm using GCC 6.1.0. Updated to 6.2.0; same issue.

1 Answer 1

1

The issue was that on windows, MinGW (GCC) was not detecting the current CPU architecture properly when -march=native was passed in. It was falling back to an architecture that did not support POPCNT as a native instruction (probably i686). As a test, -mpopcnt was added to the build and everything worked fine.

The fix is to manually specify the architecture using -march=.

Furthermore: is this a bug with MingGW since the native architecture is not polled for properly?

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.