Trying to include a library, but keep getting 'undefined reference to' messages
I am attempting to use the libtommath library. I'm using the NetBeans IDE for my project on Ubuntu linux. I have downloaded and built the library, I have done a 'make install' to put the resulting .a file into /usr/lib/ and the .h files into /usr/include
It appears to be finding the files appropriately (since I no longer get those errors, which I did before installing into the /usr directories).
However, when I create a simple main making a call to mp_init (which is in the library), I get the following error when I attempt to make my project:
mkdir -p build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86
rm -f build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/main.o.d
gcc -c -g -MMD -MP -MF build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/main.o.d -o build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/main.o main.c
mkdir -p dist/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86
gcc -o dist/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/cproj1 build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/main.o
build/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/main.o: In function 'main':
/home/[[myusername]]/NetBeansProjects/CProj1/main.c:18: undefined reference to `mp_init'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make[2]: *** [dist/Debug/GNU-Linux-x86/cproj1] Error 1
So, it looks like the linker can't find the function within the library, however it IS there, so I just don't know what could be causing this.
I get the same error if I type the gcc command directly and skip the makefile, I also made sure the static library got compiled with gcc as well.
Edited to Add:
I get these same errors if I do the compile directly and add the library with -l or -L:
$ gcc -l /usr/lib/libtommath.a main.c
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -l/usr/lib/libtommath.a
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
$ gcc -llibtommath.a main.c
/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -llibtommath.a
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
$ gcc -Llibtommath.a main.c
/tmp/ccOxzclw.o: In function `main':
main.c:(.text+0x18): undefined reference to `mp_init'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
$ gcc -Llibtommath.a main.c
/tmp/ccOxzclw.o: In function `main':
main.c:(.text+0x18): undefined reference to `mp_init'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
I am very rusty on this stuff, so I'm not sure I'm using the right command here, in the -L examples are the libraries being found? If the library isn't being found how on earth do I get it to find the library? It's in /usr/lib, I've tried it with the .a file in the current directory, etc. Is there an environment variable I need to set? If so, how, etc.
I've tried a completely different library (GMP) and had the EXACT same problem. This has got to be some kind of Ubuntu environment issue? Anyone have any idea how to fix this?
The trick here is to put the library AFTER the module you are compiling. The problem is a reference thing. The linker resolves references in order, so when the library is BEFORE the module being compiled, the linker gets confused and does not think that any of the functions in the library are needed. By putting the library AFTER the module, the references to the library in the module are resolved by the linker.
Yes, It is required to add libraries after the source files/objects files. This command will solve the problem:
gcc -static -L/usr/lib -I/usr/lib main.c -ltommath
If the .c source files are converted .cpp (like as in parsec), then the extern needs to be followed by "C" as in
extern "C" void foo();