Mismatch Detected for 'RuntimeLibrary' - c++
I downloaded and extracted Crypto++ in C:\cryptopp. I used Visual Studio Express 2012 to build all the projects inside (as instructed in readme), and everything was built successfully. Then I made a test project in some other folder and added cryptolib as a dependency. After that, I added the include path so I can easily include all the headers. When I tried to compile, I got an error about unresolved symbols.
To remedy that, I added C:\cryptopp\Win32\Output\Debug\cryptlib.lib to link additional dependencies. Now I get this error:
Error 1 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) CryptoTest
Error 2 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(iterhash.obj) CryptoTest
Error 3 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(sha.obj) CryptoTest
Error 4 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(pch.obj) CryptoTest
Error 5 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(misc.obj) CryptoTest
Error 6 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(queue.obj) CryptoTest
Error 7 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(algparam.obj) CryptoTest
Error 8 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(filters.obj) CryptoTest
Error 9 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(fips140.obj) CryptoTest
Error 10 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(cpu.obj) CryptoTest
Error 11 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(mqueue.obj) CryptoTest
I also get:
Error 12 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::_Container_base12::_Container_base12(void)" (??0_Container_base12#std##QAE#XZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest
Error 13 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::_Container_base12::~_Container_base12(void)" (??1_Container_base12#std##QAE#XZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest
Error 14 error LNK2005: "public: void __thiscall std::_Container_base12::_Orphan_all(void)" (?_Orphan_all#_Container_base12#std##QAEXXZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest
Error 15 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::locale::id::id(unsigned int)" (??0id#locale#std##QAE#I#Z) already defined in cryptlib.lib(iterhash.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest
Warning 16 warning LNK4098: defaultlib 'LIBCMTD' conflicts with use of other libs; use /NODEFAULTLIB:library C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\LINK CryptoTest
Error 17 error LNK1169: one or more multiply defined symbols found C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\Debug\CryptoTest.exe 1 1 CryptoTest
The code I tried to compile was simple (I got this from another site):
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include "sha.h"
#include "hex.h"
using namespace std;
string SHA256(string data) {
byte const* pbData = (byte*) data.data();
unsigned int nDataLen = data.size();
byte abDigest[32];
CryptoPP::SHA256().CalculateDigest(abDigest, pbData, nDataLen);
return string((char*)abDigest);
}
int main(void) {
return 0;
}
Any ideas how to fix this? I really only need SHA-256 right now, nothing else.
I am using Windows 7 64 bit, and I downloaded VS C++ today, so it should be the newest version.
(This is already answered in comments, but since it lacks an actual answer, I'm writing this.)
This problem arises in newer versions of Visual C++ (the older versions usually just silently linked the program and it would crash and burn at run time.) It means that some of the libraries you are linking with your program (or even some of the source files inside your program itself) are using different versions of the CRT (the C RunTime library.)
To correct this error, you need to go into your Project Properties (and/or those of the libraries you are using,) then into C/C++, then Code Generation, and check the value of Runtime Library; this should be exactly the same for all the files and libraries you are linking together. (The rules are a little more relaxed for linking with DLLs, but I'm not going to go into the "why" and into more details here.)
There are currently four options for this setting:
Multithreaded Debug
Multithreaded Debug DLL
Multithreaded Release
Multithreaded Release DLL
Your particular problem seems to stem from you linking a library built with "Multithreaded Debug" (i.e. static multithreaded debug CRT) against a program that is being built using the "Multithreaded Debug DLL" setting (i.e. dynamic multithreaded debug CRT.) You should change this setting either in the library, or in your program. For now, I suggest changing this in your program.
Note that since Visual Studio projects use different sets of project settings for debug and release builds (and 32/64-bit builds) you should make sure the settings match in all of these project configurations.
For (some) more information, you can see these (linked from a comment above):
Linker Tools Warning LNK4098 on MSDN
/MD, /ML, /MT, /LD (Use Run-Time Library) on MSDN
Build errors with VC11 Beta - mixing MTd libs with MDd exes fail to link on Bugzilla#Mozilla
UPDATE: (This is in response to a comment that asks for the reason that this much care must be taken.)
If two pieces of code that we are linking together are themselves linking against and using the standard library, then the standard library must be the same for both of them, unless great care is taken about how our two code pieces interact and pass around data. Generally, I would say that for almost all situations just use the exact same version of the standard library runtime (regarding debug/release, threads, and obviously the version of Visual C++, among other things like iterator debugging, etc.)
The most important part of the problem is this: having the same idea about the size of objects on either side of a function call.
Consider for example that the above two pieces of code are called A and B. A is compiled against one version of the standard library, and B against another. In A's view, some random object that a standard function returns to it (e.g. a block of memory or an iterator or a FILE object or whatever) has some specific size and layout (remember that structure layout is determined and fixed at compile time in C/C++.) For any of several reasons, B's idea of the size/layout of the same objects is different (it can be because of additional debug information, natural evolution of data structures over time, etc.)
Now, if A calls the standard library and gets an object back, then passes that object to B, and B touches that object in any way, chances are that B will mess that object up (e.g. write the wrong field, or past the end of it, etc.)
The above isn't the only kind of problems that can happen. Internal global or static objects in the standard library can cause problems too. And there are more obscure classes of problems as well.
All this gets weirder in some aspects when using DLLs (dynamic runtime library) instead of libs (static runtime library.)
This situation can apply to any library used by two pieces of code that work together, but the standard library gets used by most (if not almost all) programs, and that increases the chances of clash.
What I've described is obviously a watered down and simplified version of the actual mess that awaits you if you mix library versions. I hope that it gives you an idea of why you shouldn't do it!
I had this problem along with mismatch in ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL.
As a sunday-evening problem after all seemed ok and good to go, I was put out for some time.
Working in de VS2017 IDE (Solution Explorer) I had recently added/copied a sourcefile reference to my project (ctrl-drag) from another project. Looking into properties->C/C++/Preprocessor - at source file level, not project level - I noticed that in a Release configuration _DEBUG was specified instead of NDEBUG for this source file.
Which was all the change needed to get rid of the problem.
I downloaded and extracted Crypto++ in C:\cryptopp. I used Visual Studio Express 2012 to build all the projects inside (as instructed in readme), and everything was built successfully. Then I made a test project in some other folder and added cryptolib as a dependency.
The conversion was probably not successful. The only thing that was successful was the running of VCUpgrade. The actual conversion itself failed but you don't know until you experience the errors you are seeing. For some of the details, see Visual Studio on the Crypto++ wiki.
Any ideas how to fix this?
To resolve your issues, you should download vs2010.zip if you want static C/C++ runtime linking (/MT or /MTd), or vs2010-dynamic.zip if you want dynamic C/C++ runtime linking (/MT or /MTd). Both fix the latent, silent failures produced by VCUpgrade.
vs2010.zip, vs2010-dynamic.zip and vs2005-dynamic.zip are built from the latest GitHub sources. As of this writing (JUN 1 2016), that's effectively pre-Crypto++ 5.6.4. If you are using the ZIP files with a down level Crypto++, like 5.6.2 or 5.6.3, then you will run into minor problems.
There are two minor problems I am aware. First is a rename of bench.cpp to bench1.cpp. Its error is either:
C1083: Cannot open source file: 'bench1.cpp': No such file or directory
LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "void __cdecl OutputResultOperations(char const *,char const *,bool,unsigned long,double)" (?OutputResultOperations##YAXPBD0_NKN#Z)
The fix is to either (1) open cryptest.vcxproj in notepad, find bench1.cpp, and then rename it to bench.cpp. Or (2) rename bench.cpp to bench1.cpp on the filesystem. Please don't delete this file.
The second problem is a little trickier because its a moving target. Down level releases, like 5.6.2 or 5.6.3, are missing the latest classes available in GitHub. The missing class files include HKDF (5.6.3), RDRAND (5.6.3), RDSEED (5.6.3), ChaCha (5.6.4), BLAKE2 (5.6.4), Poly1305 (5.6.4), etc.
The fix is to remove the missing source files from the Visual Studio project files since they don't exist for the down level releases.
Another option is to add the missing class files from the latest sources, but there could be complications. For example, many of the sources subtly depend upon the latest config.h, cpu.h and cpu.cpp. The "subtlety" is you won't realize you are getting an under-performing class.
An example of under-performing class is BLAKE2. config.h adds compile time ARM-32 and ARM-64 detection. cpu.h and cpu.cpp adds runtime ARM instruction detection, which depends upon compile time detection. If you add BLAKE2 without the other files, then none of the detection occurs and you get a straight C/C++ implementation. You probably won't realize you are missing the NEON opportunity, which runs around 9 to 12 cycles-per-byte versus 40 cycles-per-byte or so for vanilla C/C++.
Issue can be solved by adding CRT of msvcrtd.lib in the linker library.
Because cryptlib.lib used CRT version of debug.
Related
Linker warnings when switching from /MDd to /MT [duplicate]
I downloaded and extracted Crypto++ in C:\cryptopp. I used Visual Studio Express 2012 to build all the projects inside (as instructed in readme), and everything was built successfully. Then I made a test project in some other folder and added cryptolib as a dependency. After that, I added the include path so I can easily include all the headers. When I tried to compile, I got an error about unresolved symbols. To remedy that, I added C:\cryptopp\Win32\Output\Debug\cryptlib.lib to link additional dependencies. Now I get this error: Error 1 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) CryptoTest Error 2 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(iterhash.obj) CryptoTest Error 3 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(sha.obj) CryptoTest Error 4 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(pch.obj) CryptoTest Error 5 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(misc.obj) CryptoTest Error 6 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(queue.obj) CryptoTest Error 7 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(algparam.obj) CryptoTest Error 8 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(filters.obj) CryptoTest Error 9 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(fips140.obj) CryptoTest Error 10 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(cpu.obj) CryptoTest Error 11 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in program.obj C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\cryptlib.lib(mqueue.obj) CryptoTest I also get: Error 12 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::_Container_base12::_Container_base12(void)" (??0_Container_base12#std##QAE#XZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest Error 13 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::_Container_base12::~_Container_base12(void)" (??1_Container_base12#std##QAE#XZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest Error 14 error LNK2005: "public: void __thiscall std::_Container_base12::_Orphan_all(void)" (?_Orphan_all#_Container_base12#std##QAEXXZ) already defined in cryptlib.lib(cryptlib.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest Error 15 error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::locale::id::id(unsigned int)" (??0id#locale#std##QAE#I#Z) already defined in cryptlib.lib(iterhash.obj) C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\msvcprtd.lib(MSVCP110D.dll) CryptoTest Warning 16 warning LNK4098: defaultlib 'LIBCMTD' conflicts with use of other libs; use /NODEFAULTLIB:library C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\CryptoTest\LINK CryptoTest Error 17 error LNK1169: one or more multiply defined symbols found C:\Data\Work\C++ VS\CryptoTest\Debug\CryptoTest.exe 1 1 CryptoTest The code I tried to compile was simple (I got this from another site): #include <iostream> #include <string> #include "sha.h" #include "hex.h" using namespace std; string SHA256(string data) { byte const* pbData = (byte*) data.data(); unsigned int nDataLen = data.size(); byte abDigest[32]; CryptoPP::SHA256().CalculateDigest(abDigest, pbData, nDataLen); return string((char*)abDigest); } int main(void) { return 0; } Any ideas how to fix this? I really only need SHA-256 right now, nothing else. I am using Windows 7 64 bit, and I downloaded VS C++ today, so it should be the newest version.
(This is already answered in comments, but since it lacks an actual answer, I'm writing this.) This problem arises in newer versions of Visual C++ (the older versions usually just silently linked the program and it would crash and burn at run time.) It means that some of the libraries you are linking with your program (or even some of the source files inside your program itself) are using different versions of the CRT (the C RunTime library.) To correct this error, you need to go into your Project Properties (and/or those of the libraries you are using,) then into C/C++, then Code Generation, and check the value of Runtime Library; this should be exactly the same for all the files and libraries you are linking together. (The rules are a little more relaxed for linking with DLLs, but I'm not going to go into the "why" and into more details here.) There are currently four options for this setting: Multithreaded Debug Multithreaded Debug DLL Multithreaded Release Multithreaded Release DLL Your particular problem seems to stem from you linking a library built with "Multithreaded Debug" (i.e. static multithreaded debug CRT) against a program that is being built using the "Multithreaded Debug DLL" setting (i.e. dynamic multithreaded debug CRT.) You should change this setting either in the library, or in your program. For now, I suggest changing this in your program. Note that since Visual Studio projects use different sets of project settings for debug and release builds (and 32/64-bit builds) you should make sure the settings match in all of these project configurations. For (some) more information, you can see these (linked from a comment above): Linker Tools Warning LNK4098 on MSDN /MD, /ML, /MT, /LD (Use Run-Time Library) on MSDN Build errors with VC11 Beta - mixing MTd libs with MDd exes fail to link on Bugzilla#Mozilla UPDATE: (This is in response to a comment that asks for the reason that this much care must be taken.) If two pieces of code that we are linking together are themselves linking against and using the standard library, then the standard library must be the same for both of them, unless great care is taken about how our two code pieces interact and pass around data. Generally, I would say that for almost all situations just use the exact same version of the standard library runtime (regarding debug/release, threads, and obviously the version of Visual C++, among other things like iterator debugging, etc.) The most important part of the problem is this: having the same idea about the size of objects on either side of a function call. Consider for example that the above two pieces of code are called A and B. A is compiled against one version of the standard library, and B against another. In A's view, some random object that a standard function returns to it (e.g. a block of memory or an iterator or a FILE object or whatever) has some specific size and layout (remember that structure layout is determined and fixed at compile time in C/C++.) For any of several reasons, B's idea of the size/layout of the same objects is different (it can be because of additional debug information, natural evolution of data structures over time, etc.) Now, if A calls the standard library and gets an object back, then passes that object to B, and B touches that object in any way, chances are that B will mess that object up (e.g. write the wrong field, or past the end of it, etc.) The above isn't the only kind of problems that can happen. Internal global or static objects in the standard library can cause problems too. And there are more obscure classes of problems as well. All this gets weirder in some aspects when using DLLs (dynamic runtime library) instead of libs (static runtime library.) This situation can apply to any library used by two pieces of code that work together, but the standard library gets used by most (if not almost all) programs, and that increases the chances of clash. What I've described is obviously a watered down and simplified version of the actual mess that awaits you if you mix library versions. I hope that it gives you an idea of why you shouldn't do it!
I had this problem along with mismatch in ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL. As a sunday-evening problem after all seemed ok and good to go, I was put out for some time. Working in de VS2017 IDE (Solution Explorer) I had recently added/copied a sourcefile reference to my project (ctrl-drag) from another project. Looking into properties->C/C++/Preprocessor - at source file level, not project level - I noticed that in a Release configuration _DEBUG was specified instead of NDEBUG for this source file. Which was all the change needed to get rid of the problem.
I downloaded and extracted Crypto++ in C:\cryptopp. I used Visual Studio Express 2012 to build all the projects inside (as instructed in readme), and everything was built successfully. Then I made a test project in some other folder and added cryptolib as a dependency. The conversion was probably not successful. The only thing that was successful was the running of VCUpgrade. The actual conversion itself failed but you don't know until you experience the errors you are seeing. For some of the details, see Visual Studio on the Crypto++ wiki. Any ideas how to fix this? To resolve your issues, you should download vs2010.zip if you want static C/C++ runtime linking (/MT or /MTd), or vs2010-dynamic.zip if you want dynamic C/C++ runtime linking (/MT or /MTd). Both fix the latent, silent failures produced by VCUpgrade. vs2010.zip, vs2010-dynamic.zip and vs2005-dynamic.zip are built from the latest GitHub sources. As of this writing (JUN 1 2016), that's effectively pre-Crypto++ 5.6.4. If you are using the ZIP files with a down level Crypto++, like 5.6.2 or 5.6.3, then you will run into minor problems. There are two minor problems I am aware. First is a rename of bench.cpp to bench1.cpp. Its error is either: C1083: Cannot open source file: 'bench1.cpp': No such file or directory LNK2001: unresolved external symbol "void __cdecl OutputResultOperations(char const *,char const *,bool,unsigned long,double)" (?OutputResultOperations##YAXPBD0_NKN#Z) The fix is to either (1) open cryptest.vcxproj in notepad, find bench1.cpp, and then rename it to bench.cpp. Or (2) rename bench.cpp to bench1.cpp on the filesystem. Please don't delete this file. The second problem is a little trickier because its a moving target. Down level releases, like 5.6.2 or 5.6.3, are missing the latest classes available in GitHub. The missing class files include HKDF (5.6.3), RDRAND (5.6.3), RDSEED (5.6.3), ChaCha (5.6.4), BLAKE2 (5.6.4), Poly1305 (5.6.4), etc. The fix is to remove the missing source files from the Visual Studio project files since they don't exist for the down level releases. Another option is to add the missing class files from the latest sources, but there could be complications. For example, many of the sources subtly depend upon the latest config.h, cpu.h and cpu.cpp. The "subtlety" is you won't realize you are getting an under-performing class. An example of under-performing class is BLAKE2. config.h adds compile time ARM-32 and ARM-64 detection. cpu.h and cpu.cpp adds runtime ARM instruction detection, which depends upon compile time detection. If you add BLAKE2 without the other files, then none of the detection occurs and you get a straight C/C++ implementation. You probably won't realize you are missing the NEON opportunity, which runs around 9 to 12 cycles-per-byte versus 40 cycles-per-byte or so for vanilla C/C++.
Issue can be solved by adding CRT of msvcrtd.lib in the linker library. Because cryptlib.lib used CRT version of debug.
Libcpmt.lib: Error LNK2038 mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MT_StaticRelease' doesn't match value 'MD_DynamicRelease'
While compiling a current project I get a bunch (about 80) of Linker errors that I don't know anymore how to debug further. I am using Visual Studio 2019. It's a C++ project compiled on Windows 10. A lot of them come from a library called libcpmt.lib. There are 2 types of error related to the library: First it claims some function s are alredy defined in msvcprt.lib(MSVCP140.dll) (which is strange since I am using Visual Studio 2019 v142) Error LNK2005 "protected: __cdecl std::locale::facet::facet(unsigned __int64)" (??0facet#locale#std##IEAA#_K#Z) already defined in msvcprt.lib(MSVCP140.dll) DataConverter path_to_project\libcpmt.lib(locale0.obj) and second it claims that libcpmt.lib is compiled statically while my project used dynamically linked libraries. Error LNK2038 mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MT_StaticRelease' doesn't match value 'MD_DynamicRelease' in annotation.obj DataConverter path_to_project\libcpmt.lib(xstol.obj) 1 The same error also appears on a library called mpirxx.lib Error LNK2038 mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MT_StaticRelease' doesn't match value 'MD_DynamicRelease' in annotation.obj DataConverter path_to_project\mpirxx.lib(osmpf.obj) 1 and Error LNK2005 "public: void __cdecl std::basic_ostream<char,struct std::char_traits<char> >::_Osfx(void)" (?_Osfx#?$basic_ostream#DU?$char_traits#D#std###std##QEAAXXZ) already defined in mpirxx.lib(osmpf.obj) DataConverter path_to_project\msvcprt.lib(MSVCP140.dll) 1 From what little I found about the lib on the internet it appears to be included when your C++->Code Generation->Runtime Library is set to MT, but my settings are set to MD. I am including a lot of external libraries in my project: flann.lib flann_cpp.lib Qt5Widgets.lib qtmain.lib Qt5Gui.lib Qt5Core.lib libboost_atomic-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_chrono-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_container-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_context-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_contract-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_coroutine-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_date_time-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_exception-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_fiber-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_graph-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_iostreams-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_locale-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_log_setup-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_log-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_c99f-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_c99l-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_c99-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_tr1f-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_tr1l-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_math_tr1-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_nowide-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_numpy37-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_prg_exec_monitor-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_program_options-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_python37-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_random-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_regex-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_serialization-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_stacktrace_noop-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_stacktrace_windbg_cached-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_stacktrace_windbg-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_system-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_test_exec_monitor-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_thread-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_timer-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_type_erasure-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_unit_test_framework-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_wave-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib libboost_wserialization-vc142-mt-x64-1_74.lib bz2.lib libpng16.lib lz4.lib lzma.lib mpfr.lib mpir.lib mpirxx.lib qhullcpp.lib xxhash.lib zlib.lib zstd.lib gmp.lib glew32.lib glew32s.lib opencv_world440.lib vtkChartsCore-9.0.lib vtkCommonColor-9.0.lib vtkCommonComputationalGeometry-9.0.lib vtkCommonCore-9.0.lib vtkCommonDataModel-9.0.lib vtkCommonExecutionModel-9.0.lib vtkCommonMath-9.0.lib vtkCommonMisc-9.0.lib vtkCommonSystem-9.0.lib vtkCommonTransforms-9.0.lib vtkDICOMParser-9.0.lib vtkDomainsChemistry-9.0.lib vtkdoubleconversion-9.0.lib vtkexodusII-9.0.lib vtkexpat-9.0.lib vtkFiltersAMR-9.0.lib vtkFiltersCore-9.0.lib vtkFiltersExtraction-9.0.lib vtkFiltersFlowPaths-9.0.lib vtkFiltersGeneral-9.0.lib vtkFiltersGeneric-9.0.lib vtkFiltersGeometry-9.0.lib vtkFiltersHybrid-9.0.lib vtkFiltersHyperTree-9.0.lib vtkFiltersImaging-9.0.lib vtkFiltersModeling-9.0.lib vtkFiltersParallel-9.0.lib vtkFiltersParallelImaging-9.0.lib vtkFiltersPoints-9.0.lib vtkFiltersProgrammable-9.0.lib vtkFiltersSelection-9.0.lib vtkFiltersSMP-9.0.lib vtkFiltersSources-9.0.lib vtkFiltersStatistics-9.0.lib vtkFiltersTexture-9.0.lib vtkFiltersTopology-9.0.lib vtkFiltersVerdict-9.0.lib vtkfreetype-9.0.lib vtkGeovisCore-9.0.lib vtkgl2ps-9.0.lib vtkglew-9.0.lib vtkhdf5-9.0.lib vtkhdf5_hl-9.0.lib vtkImagingColor-9.0.lib vtkImagingCore-9.0.lib vtkImagingFourier-9.0.lib vtkImagingGeneral-9.0.lib vtkImagingHybrid-9.0.lib vtkImagingMath-9.0.lib vtkImagingMorphological-9.0.lib vtkImagingSources-9.0.lib vtkImagingStatistics-9.0.lib vtkImagingStencil-9.0.lib vtkInfovisCore-9.0.lib vtkInfovisLayout-9.0.lib vtkInteractionImage-9.0.lib vtkInteractionStyle-9.0.lib vtkInteractionWidgets-9.0.lib vtkIOAMR-9.0.lib vtkIOAsynchronous-9.0.lib vtkIOCityGML-9.0.lib vtkIOCore-9.0.lib vtkIOEnSight-9.0.lib vtkIOExodus-9.0.lib vtkIOExport-9.0.lib vtkIOExportGL2PS-9.0.lib vtkIOExportPDF-9.0.lib vtkIOGeometry-9.0.lib vtkIOImage-9.0.lib vtkIOImport-9.0.lib vtkIOInfovis-9.0.lib vtkIOLegacy-9.0.lib vtkIOLSDyna-9.0.lib vtkIOMINC-9.0.lib vtkIOMotionFX-9.0.lib vtkIOMovie-9.0.lib vtkIONetCDF-9.0.lib vtkIOOggTheora-9.0.lib vtkIOParallel-9.0.lib vtkIOParallelXML-9.0.lib vtkIOPLY-9.0.lib vtkIOSegY-9.0.lib vtkIOSQL-9.0.lib vtkIOTecplotTable-9.0.lib vtkIOVeraOut-9.0.lib vtkIOVideo-9.0.lib vtkIOXML-9.0.lib vtkIOXMLParser-9.0.lib vtkjpeg-9.0.lib vtkjsoncpp-9.0.lib vtklibharu-9.0.lib vtklibproj-9.0.lib vtklibxml2-9.0.lib vtkloguru-9.0.lib vtklz4-9.0.lib vtklzma-9.0.lib vtkmetaio-9.0.lib vtknetcdf-9.0.lib vtkogg-9.0.lib vtkParallelCore-9.0.lib vtkParallelDIY-9.0.lib vtkpng-9.0.lib vtkpugixml-9.0.lib vtkRenderingAnnotation-9.0.lib vtkRenderingContext2D-9.0.lib vtkRenderingCore-9.0.lib vtkRenderingFreeType-9.0.lib vtkRenderingGL2PSOpenGL2-9.0.lib vtkRenderingImage-9.0.lib vtkRenderingLabel-9.0.lib vtkRenderingLOD-9.0.lib vtkRenderingOpenGL2-9.0.lib vtkRenderingSceneGraph-9.0.lib vtkRenderingUI-9.0.lib vtkRenderingVolume-9.0.lib vtkRenderingVolumeOpenGL2-9.0.lib vtkRenderingVtkJS-9.0.lib vtksqlite-9.0.lib vtksys-9.0.lib vtkTestingRendering-9.0.lib vtktheora-9.0.lib vtktiff-9.0.lib vtkverdict-9.0.lib vtkViewsContext2D-9.0.lib vtkViewsCore-9.0.lib vtkViewsInfovis-9.0.lib vtkWrappingTools-9.0.lib vtkzlib-9.0.lib pcl_common.lib pcl_features.lib pcl_filters.lib pcl_io.lib pcl_io_ply.lib pcl_kdtree.lib pcl_keypoints.lib pcl_ml.lib pcl_octree.lib pcl_recognition.lib pcl_registration.lib pcl_search.lib pcl_segmentation.lib pcl_sample_consensus.lib pcl_stereo.lib pcl_surface.lib pcl_tracking.lib Does anybody have an idea how to further debug or fix these issues? PS: I currently have another error which is likely unrelated but I wanted to include it for completeness. The linker can't find the lib for loadPolygonFilePLY. Likely I'm just missing an additional pcl lib. If anybody happens to know how it's called please also comment: Error LNK2001 unresolved external symbol "int __cdecl pcl::io::loadPolygonFilePLY(class std::basic_string<char,struct std::char_traits<char>,class std::allocator<char> > const &,struct pcl::PolygonMesh &)" (?loadPolygonFilePLY#io#pcl##YAHAEBV?$basic_string#DU?$char_traits#D#std##V?$allocator#D#2##std##AEAUPolygonMesh#2##Z)
In case somebody comes along a similar issue. These was a library in my included libraries that was using the static linkage (mpirxx.lib). A good way to debug this is to put /VERBOSE:LIB in your linker options. Then build and go to your Output windows where you can see which is the first library to trigger this error chain. Thanks to Alan Birtles for the help.
LNK 2038: RuntimeLibrary mismatch when using #include <xxx>
so I have C++ code in a dll 'MyDll', which is PInvoked by a C# project. This setup has been working well. Recently I introduced a few instances of #include <> and now, whenever I try to compile in Debug mode, I get the LNK 2038 error: 1>SimConnect.lib(SimConnectClient.obj) : error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MD_DynamicRelease' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in MyDll.obj 1>SimConnect.lib(commClient.obj) : error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MD_DynamicRelease' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in MyDll.obj 1>SimConnect.lib(client.obj) : error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MD_DynamicRelease' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in MyDll.obj SimConnect.lib is a release version (I don't have the source code) and there fore, it's RuntimeLibrary's value is MD (Multit-hreaded DLL (release)). Now, according to several answers on SO I've already found, I changed my RuntimeLibrary to MD in the Debug configuration. My problem is concretely that, even after changing the RuntimeLibrary on MyDll's project's properties to Multi-threaded Dll (MD) in the Debug configuration, I still get the exact same errors. Since I am getting the exact same error, the key part being "... doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in MyDll.obj" even though the project properties have been changed, I take this as a hint that I am probably not changing the RuntimeLibrary's value correctly? Furthermore, the errors only pop up when I use #include <> (#include "xxx" is not a problem"). Whenever I comment out any #include <> the errors don't trouble me. Could someone give me a hint about what I might be doing wrong? It would be also interesting to know why using these #includes trigger the mismatch errors with SimConnect.
Mismatch Detected for RunTimeLibrary ( MD DLL )
I'm trying to build a Win32 C++ project (AccountBuilder) with a configuration type of Application.exe and a Runtime Library of 'Multi-threaded DLL (/MD)' with a link to a lib file of another Win32 C++ project (ReportGenerator) with a configuration type of Static Library .lib also with a Runtime Library of 'Multi-threaded DLL (/MD)' in all configurations for both projects. However, I receive the following error: Error 1 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' doesn't match value 'MD_DynamicRelease' in Account.obj File: Rpf.ReportGenerator(ReportGenerator.obj) Project: AccountBuilder Error 2 error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' doesn't match value 'MD_DynamicRelease' in Account.obj File: Rpf.ReportGenerator(FileType.obj) Project: AccountBuilder After reading other questions on the topic I thought to ensure that the runtime libraries match exactly and it seems they do. However, the project still will not build in Debug within VS 2012? What could I be missing? I've set the configuration for the Runtime Library to '/MD' for 'All Configurations' to no avail and attempted multiple rebuilds of both projects and manually deleting the intermediate obj files with no luck.
Error C4996 on using boost example
I have installed Boost 1.58.0 following their instructions and the examples they give in the installation guide work fine using VS2012. I also have OpenCV3.0.0 included in my properties. I want to check out an example of some graphing functions, so I copied this code: http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_58_0/libs/graph/example/astar_maze.cpp , and included stdafx.h on the top. When compiling, I get error C4996: 'std::_Fill_n': Function call with parameters that may be unsafe Other people suggest either using #pragma warning( disable : 4996 ) which doesn't seem to change anything, or turning off SDL checks via properties, which turns the error into a warning, but gives me many more errors, mostly LNK2005. Any ideas how to get the code running? Additional info: Types of error when turning off SDL checks are (my project is BoostExample): error LNK2038: mismatch detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 'MDd_DynamicDebug' in BoostExample.obj error LNK2005: "public: __thiscall std::_Container_base12::_Container_base12(void)" (??0_Container_base12#std##QAE#XZ) already defined in opencv_ts300d.lib(ts_perf.obj) error LNK2005: ___crtSetUnhandledExceptionFilter already defined in MSVCRTD.lib(MSVCR110D.dll) and finally fatal error LNK1169: one or more multiply defined symbols found I guess this means that Boost is interacting with OpenCV and other DLLs by redefining something. Is it possible that I installed the wrong boost version? I just grabbed the main one.
The linker error tells basically the boost and the OpenCV were compiled off using different runtime settings, one for static lib and the other for DLL, and cannot be mixed used. you need to rebuild your boost and OpenCV to use same runtime setting.