I'm building a simple C++ program and I want to temporarily substitute a system supplied shared library with a more recent version of it, for development and testing.
I tried setting the LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable but the linker (ld) failed with:
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lyaml-cpp
I expected that to work because according to the ld man page:
The linker uses the following search paths to locate required shared libraries: ... For a native linker, the contents of the environment variable "LD_LIBRARY_PATH"...
I then tried setting the LIBRARY_PATH, and that worked.
According to the GCC manual:
The value of LIBRARY_PATH is a colon-separated list of directories, much like PATH. When configured as a native compiler, GCC tries the directories thus specified when searching for special linker files, if it can't find them using GCC_EXEC_PREFIX. Linking using GCC also uses these directories when searching for ordinary libraries for the -l option (but directories specified with -L come first).
As the (GCC) manual suggests, LIBRARY_PATH works because I link with GCC.
But..
- Since I link with gcc why ld is being called, as the error message suggests?
- What's the point of having two variables serving the same purpose? Are there any other differences?
-rpath-link
option, which is related to finding shared libs that are dependencies of the shared libs you're linking to explicitly (to check that they satisfy any undefined refs in the ones you're linking to). The rpath-link dirs are not used to find the libs you're linking to explicitly,ld
only uses the dirs named with the-L
option for that (and GCC converts the contents ofLIBRARY_PATH
into-L
options forld
).