I have a commercial c library (a.so) that has several functions. When you call the a.open() function, it performs a dlopen() call for another library dynamically. If calling a.open('b'), it will open b.so. If calling a.open('c'), it will open c.so.
The problem is that a.so and b.so share a global variable defined in a.so, but referenced by b.so (and c.so,etc.). I am able to load a.so correctly in python using ctypes and see all the symbols in Python. However, when I call a.open('b'), it attempts to load b.so but returns undefined symbol.
//a.c -source for a.so library
int aglobal = 0;
void open(char* lib)
{ dlopen(lib); }
//b.c - source for b.so library
extern int aglobal;
Here is my python code to load:
from ctypes import cdll
p = ctypes.CDLL('a.so')
p.open('b')
returns the error code: undefined symbol: aglobal
Some other notes:
files are linked with -fPIC -rdynamic -shared
When I write a C program that does the same as the python program, there is not a problem.
I've tried swig to wrap the library also, and numerous other things, build options, etc. but same results.
Is Python binding the symbols differently or something?