I know that you can add the c++ linker with -lstdc++ and I do this, yet I am still getting an error. fatal error: iostream: No such file or directory. Hence, gcc doesn't seem to know where to look for the headers.
What is the best way to proceed here, given that g++ is not an option?
Thanks for the help!
Yes, gcc treats a file with extension .cpp as C++ source:
$ cat test.cpp
#include <iostream>
int c;
$ gcc -c test.cpp
$
You can also explicitly specify the language with -x language:
$ mv test.cpp test.c
$ gcc -c -x c++ test.c
$
But why do you want to do this? You should have g++ available and working. If not, that sounds like an incomplete or botched installation.
Related
I am a very new to programming and have a very basic question that may be answered in other threads however I think they are far too advanced for me to understand how. I have actually found many answers so far on this site but this is the first problem that forced me to create an account and ask.
Anyway i am running a very basic example program on linux mint 18.3. Now I have seen this exact code work on a machine with windows 8 I believe so I was wondering if that could be the problem. I have created a class and when i plug in my object then build and run I get:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/5/../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/crt1.o||In function _start':|
(.text+0x20)||undefined reference tomain'|
This is the entire code:
#include <iostream>
#include "Gladius.h"
using namespace std;
int main()
{
Gladius io;
return 0;
}
Thats it very basic. here is the .h
#ifndef GLADIUS_H
#define GLADIUS_H
class Gladius
{
public:
Gladius();
};
#endif // GLADIUS_H
and the .cpp for the class.
#include "Gladius.h"
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
Gladius::Gladius()
{
cout << "The Gladius is a short sword" << endl;
}
I know this seems extremely simple but I am just learning to code and i have been looking all over for an explanation why this isn't working yet I see it work on another pc exactly as is. Anyway any explanation would be greatly appreciated.
Here is what i found in command line If this answers your questions about what was in the cmd.
g++ -Wall -fexceptions -g -std=c++11 -Wall -I -c /home/gator/Documents/Spartan1/Gladius.cpp -o obj/Debug/Gladius.o
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/5/../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/crt1.o: In function _start':
(.text+0x20): undefined reference tomain'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Know the compiler options(gcc/g++ compiler):
-c : Compile and assemble, but do not link
-o file : Place the output into file
So when you run
g++ filename.cpp -o executable_name
, you generate an application which can be executed.
The problem is you are compiling, assembling as well as linking when you are trying to compile "Gladius.cpp" and compiler is trying to search for main() definition.
So in your case, the compilation steps would be:
First compile "Gladius.cpp" and generate object file "Gladius.o":
g++ -Wall -fexceptions -g -std=c++11 -c Gladius.cpp
Next compile "main.cpp" and generate object file "main.o":
g++ -Wall -fexceptions -g -std=c++11 -c main.cpp
Generate executable by linking "main.o" and "Gladius.o"
g++ -Wall -fexceptions -g -std=c++11 -o main main.o Gladius.o
Now you can run "main":
./main
Your compiler's command line contains -I -c sequence.
This -I option "swallows" your -c option. -I requires an additional argument, which is an include directory name. You failed to supply that argument, which is why -I assumes that -c that follows it is the directory name. So that -I consumes that -c.
The compiler never sees that -c. Without -c it assumes that you want to compile and link your program. Since Gladius.cpp does not have main in it, you get the error at linking stage.
Here 's a simple demo of the same problem: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/8a37cd3e90a443e2
You need to figure out why you have an orphaned -I in your command line.
If you are compiling this code using a command line like:
g++ -Wall -Wextra -Werror -O gladius.cpp -o output.exe
then make sure that you include all the .cpp files (not .h files) that contain code that your program needs.
g++ -Wall -Wextra -Werror -O gladius.cpp main.cpp -o output.exe
I explain this to beginners all the time as each .cpp being a bag of Lego's in a kit. You need all the bags that came with the box in order to build the kit. If you omitted main.cpp (or the file that contains main) then you will get the linker error that you are currently getting.
What command are you using to compile, link, and then execute? It should look something like
$ g++ main.cpp gladius.cpp -odemo
$ ./demo
check your command line for linking step.. You may forgot file with main as input, or you had forgot output file name after -o (and masked main.o in result)
I had this very kind of problem myself, and though it may not be the conventional, "proper" solution, I simply renamed the ".c" file to ".cpp", and it all worked.
After all, I was compiling both c and c++ together with a c++ compiler (recommended by the library), and the c code already had the proper c++ #extern flags (see here for more on that).
Also related:
C++ Error: undefined reference to `main'
Including C Code in C++
Why do you need an explicit `-lm` compiler option
Compilation on Linux - In function '_start': (.text+0x20): undefined reference to 'main'
i'm like working client-server application..
I'm trying to run the server - CountryServer.c file..
i tried with g++ and gcc and i got compilation errors.. i even googled and got answers.. sadly i still got the same errors..
with gcc
oh, i even also tried to enable std=c++11
and std=c++0x but it says no input files.. >.<
i enabled using this command:
gcc -std=c++11
and also tried this other enabled commands:
g++ -std=c++1 CountryServer.c -o CountryServer
and
g++ -Wall -g -std=c++11 CountryServer.c -o CountryServer
for both 0x & 11
andd,i've also checked which version has the iostream and also checked the gcc or g++ version >.<
i really dont understand and dont know what other ways/solutions/methods..
please help me! thanks ! :D
for iostream error,
can you please try compiling with g++
or
compiling gcc with option -lstdc++
gcc -o -lstdc++
I have a requirement of creating a C++ program which exposes certain functions through HTTP. For that reason I was trying to use libmicrohttpd for the same. Now this library is written in C. However I am kind of new to C++ and am trying to compile this C and C++ code given here. (Which can be git cloned from here)
Now I need help in understanding how g++ may be used to compile a program which is not written completely in C++. And/or how to compile the above linked code.
PS: Working in linux
And finally if someone can point to an easier alternative than libmicrohttpd - I am all ears.
Edit to Edit:
Finally got it working. Compiled the individual cpp files with gcc and then linked everything using g++. I have no clue how this came to work, maybe some one can reply below.
I have made the following script to compile and link:
LOC="path/to/directory"
gcc -c httphandler.cpp -o httphandler.o -I $LOC
gcc -c strutil.cpp -o strutil.o -I $LOC
gcc -c api.cpp -o api.o -I $LOC
gcc -c executor.cpp -o executor.o -I $LOC
g++ -o out httphandler.o strutil.o api.o executor.o -lmicrohttpd -lboost_regex
But in the final step I am getting the following error:
/usr/bin/ld: strutil.o: undefined reference to symbol '__cxa_free_exception##CXXABI_1.3'
/usr/bin/ld: note: '__cxa_free_exception##CXXABI_1.3' is defined in DSO /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6 so try adding it to the linker command line
/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6: could not read symbols: Invalid operation
What gives?
For starters, don't compile the C code with g++, use gcc instead. Then just include the header file and use the functions normally. When linking don't forget to link with the object file(s) generated from compiling the libmicrohttpd source file(s).
For example, I'm given carModels.cpp, carModels.h, carType.in, manufacturers.h, manufacturers.o, and lastly my own file tester.cpp. How would I go about linking all of these using g++ in a Linux terminal? Would I have to create any additional ".o" files? I'm supposed to assume that the given files already work. Multiple lines in terminal are fine, I just I want a clear understanding of it. (I'm coming from a C++ IDE that I didn't really care for.)
Compile each source file to its own object file:
g++ -I . -c carModels.cpp -o carModels.o
g++ -I . -c tester.cpp -o tester.o
Now link all object files together:
g++ carModels.o tester.o manufacturers.o -o outputname
Consider adding more options like -O3, -std=c++11, -Wall, etc. as needed.
you can do this in two steps, first compile to *.o files,
gcc -c your.cpp other.cpp .....
then link them
gcc -o you_out_put_name the_object_files.o ...
In a single line, that would be just g++ -o tester *.cpp *.o. GCC will sort everything out. In particular, the *.h files are referenced via #include "" statements in the .cpp files.
I am very aware of compiling C++ programs with g++ in linux environment. But, may be I am missing something, I am getting this strange output/behaviour.
I have source file in test.cpp.
To compile this, I did
(1)
g++ -c test.cpp
g++ -o test test.o
./test
Everything works fine.
But when I did compling and linking in same stage, like this
(2)
g++ test.cpp -o test
./test => Works fine
(3)
g++ -c test.cpp -o test => Doesn't work
In my last case, test is generated but is no more executable; but in my guess it should work fine.
So, what is wrong or do I need to change some settings/configuration ??
I am using g++ 4.3.3
Thanks.
When you say:
g++ -c test.cpp -o test
The -c flag inhibits linking, so no executable is produced - you are renaming the .o file.
Basically, don't do that.
You are forcing compiler to produce an object file and name it like an executable.
Essentially your last line tells: compile this to an object file, but name it test, instead of test.obj.
-c flag means Compile Only
Try
g++ -o test test.cpp
Specifying -o in the g++ command line tells the compiler what name to give the output file. When you tried to do it all in one line, you just told the compiler to compile test.cpp as an object file named test, and no linking was done.
Have a look at the fabulous online manual for GCC for more details.
from the gcc manual:
-c Compile or assemble the source files, but do not link. The linking
stage simply is not done. The ultimate output is in the form of an
object file for each source file.
You must link the compiled object files to get the executable file.
More info about compiling and linking and stuff is here.
Read man g++. The switch -c is to compile only but not to link.
g++ -c test.cpp -o test
does what
g++ -c test.cpp
does but the object file will be test istead of the default name test.o. An object file cannot be executed.