After installing Xerces-C++ (XML library):
./configure --disable-shared
./make
./make-install
ldconfig
And writing the simple program (xmlval.cpp):
#include <stdio>
#include <xercesc/dom/DOM.hpp>
int main()
{
std::cout << "HI" << std::endl;
}
And compiling:
/usr/bin/g++ -L/usr/local/lib -I/usr/local/include -o xmlval xmlval.cpp /usr/local/lib/libxerces-c.a
The compile result is a bunch of lines like:
/usr/local/lib/libxerces-c.a(CurlNetAccessor.o): In function `xercesc_3_0::CurlNetAccessor::cleanupCurl()':
/home/stullbd/xerces-c-3.0.1/src/xercesc/util/NetAccessors/Curl/CurlNetAccessor.cpp:78: undefined reference to `curl_global_cleanup'
/usr/local/lib/libxerces-c.a(CurlNetAccessor.o): In function `xercesc_3_0::CurlNetAccessor::initCurl()':
/home/stullbd/xerces-c-3.0.1/src/xercesc/util/NetAccessors/Curl/CurlNetAccessor.cpp:70: undefined reference to `curl_global_init'
/usr/local/lib/libxerces-c.a(CurlURLInputStream.o): In function `~CurlURLInputStream':
/home/stullbd/xerces-c-3.0.1/src/xercesc/util/NetAccessors/Curl/CurlURLInputStream.cpp:168: undefined reference to `curl_multi_remove_handle'
Any thoughts on this?
You seem to miss linking with curl, try adding -lcurl.
Related
I am currently using Boost 1.54.0. I am following the code from this example.
example_44_01.cpp
#include <boost/thread.hpp>
#include <boost/chrono.hpp>
#include <iostream>
void wait(int seconds)
{
boost::this_thread::sleep_for(boost::chrono::seconds{seconds});
}
void thread()
{
for (int i = 0; i < 5; ++i)
{
wait(1);
std::cout << i << std::endl;
}
}
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
boost::thread t{thread};
t.join();
return 0;
}
So, it looks like all I need is the -lboost_thread, and -lboost_chrono libraries to link to at compile time. I also added the -lboost_system.
Here are my execution scripts.
g++-7 -Wall -std=c++1z -g -c example_44_01.cpp -o example_44_01.o
g++-7 -Wall -std=c++1z -g example_44_01.o -o example_44_01 -lboost_system -lboost_thread -lboost_chrono &>result.txt
What's going on here? This is the result.txt file:
example_44_01.o: In function `boost::this_thread::sleep_for(boost::chrono::duration<long, boost::ratio<1l, 1000000000l> > const&)':
/usr/local/include/boost/thread/pthread/thread_data.hpp:243: undefined reference to `boost::this_thread::hidden::sleep_for(timespec const&)'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
I've compiled and linked other programs with the same libraries without error. So is the error in the code? This seems doubtful as the code is straight from the documentation. Any insight is appreciated.
I had this issue once because I was indeliberately using different versions of Boost (I had first installed Boost from commandline, then a few months later on, manually from zip).
Try adding the path to your Boost libraries to the compiler. For instance, if your libraries are stored at /usr/local/lib, try:
g++-7 -Wall -std=c++1z -g example_44_01.o -o example_44_01 -L/usr/local/lib -lboost_system -lboost_thread -lboost_chrono &>result.txt
I am just trying to compile this file helloworld.cpp
#include <iostream>
#include <cvc4/cvc4.h>
using namespace CVC4;
int main() {
ExprManager em;
Expr helloworld = em.mkVar("Hello World!", em.booleanType());
SmtEngine smt(&em);
std::cout << helloworld << " is " << smt.query(helloworld) << std::endl;
return 0;
}
using g++ helloworld.cpp -lcvc4 -o helloworld -lcvc4 -Wno-deprecated. But it is giving me this error
/tmp/cc9SFpL4.o: In function `main':
helloworld.cpp:(.text+0xac): undefined reference to `CVC4::ExprManager::mkVar(std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&, CVC4::Type, unsigned int)'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Help!
I have installed CVC4 adding repo link in /etc/apt/sources.list and then calling sudo apt-get install cvc4 libcvc4-dev libcvc4parser-dev.
EDIT: I mistyped g++ helloworld.cpp -lcvc4 ... I used g++ helloworld.cpp -o helloworld -lcvc4 -Wno-deprecated. Actually I used all combinations, permutations.
This seems to be a problem with the OP's environment. Both r4C9rAyrd6A1 and I were able to compile the example on our local machines. The specific issue might have been that the OP's compiler wanted the -lcvc4 linker flag after the other flags, e.g. g++ helloworld.cpp -Wno-deprecated -o helloworld -lcvc4 as mentioned in the comments.
I've built Boost 1.59 for MinGW 4.9.2 32bit as follows:
bootstrap.bat mingw
b2 --prefix=%USERPROFILE%\Code\Libraries\boost toolset=gcc install (these are static libraries)
When trying to compile:
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/asio.hpp>
#include <boost/date_time/posix_time/posix_time.hpp>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
boost::asio::io_service io;
boost::asio::deadline_timer t(io, boost::posix_time::seconds(5));
t.wait();
cout << "Hello World!" << endl;
return 0;
}
With:
g++ -o test -L %USERPROFILE%\Code\Libraries\boost\lib -l boost_system-mgw49-mt-1_59 -I %USERPROFILE%\Code\Libraries\boost\include\boost-1_59 main.cpp
I get this error:
C:\Users\Brady\AppData\Local\Temp\ccsbGjrk.o:main.cpp:(.text+0x193): undefined reference to `boost::system::generic_category()'
C:\Users\Brady\AppData\Local\Temp\ccsbGjrk.o:main.cpp:(.text+0x19d): undefined reference to `boost::system::generic_category()'
C:\Users\Brady\AppData\Local\Temp\ccsbGjrk.o:main.cpp:(.text+0x1a7): undefined reference to `boost::system::system_category()'
C:/Program Files (x86)/QT/Tools/mingw492_32/bin/../lib/gcc/i686-w64-mingw32/4.9.2/../../../../i686-w64-mingw32/bin/ld.exe: C:\Users\Brady\AppData\Local\Temp\ccsbGjrk.o: bad reloc address 0xe in section `.text$_ZN5boost6system14error_categoryD2Ev[__ZN5boost6system14error_categoryD2Ev]'
collect2.exe: error: ld returned 1 exit status
I'm getting this same error across 2 computers. Any help is appreciated!
It's a linker error. You need to link to the Boost System library.
Do this
g++ -o test -L %USERPROFILE%\Code\Libraries\boost\lib -lboost_system -I %USERPROFILE%\Code\Libraries\boost\include\boost-1_59 main.cpp
I moved from Windows to Ubuntu and I wanted to try some C++ programming on Ubuntu. So here is very simple code and very stupid error which I can't resolve:
horse.h
#ifndef _horse_
#define _horse_
class Horse{
int speed;
public:
void saySomething();
};
#endif
horse.cpp
#include "horse.h"
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
void Horse::saySomething(){
cout << "iiiihaaaaaaa brrrrr."<<endl;
}
and Main.cpp
#include "horse.h"
int main(){
Horse h;
h.saySomething();
}
After I compile (compilation is successful) and run this I get this error message:
/tmp/ccxuDyrd.o: In function `main':
Main.cpp:(.text+0x11): undefined reference to `Horse::saySomething()'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
Please help me somehow.
Try
g++ -c main.cpp horse.cpp (to compile)
g++ -o a.out main.o horse.o (to link)
It seems you only compiled your code but did not link the resulting object files. You probably invoked the compiler like this:
g++ main.cpp
You should instead compile every *.cpp file separately and then link each resulting *.o file. And you should do this with a Makefile.
Actually, the basic idea is the same on Windows with MSVC. The compiler produces object files, the linker links them together.
I'm trying to use the boost/filesystem library in some code that I am writing. I seem to be having a hard time getting it to compile. I'm running Debian Wheezy, and have boost version 1.49(which is what comes if you install using apt-get). I'm trying to compile an example that is available with the documentation
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
using namespace boost::filesystem;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
if (argc < 2)
{
std::cout << "Usage: tut1 path\n";
return 1;
}
std::cout << argv[1] << " " << file_size(argv[1]) << '\n';
return 0;
}
I use the following command:
g++ temp.cc -o temp /usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.a
I get a number of errors such as:
/usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.a(operations.o): In function `boost::filesystem3::detail::dir_itr_close(void*&, void*&)':
(.text+0x4d): undefined reference to `boost::system::system_category()'
/usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.a(operations.o): In function `boost::filesystem3::detail::directory_iterator_increment(boost::filesystem3::directory_iterator&, boost::system::error_code*)':
(.text+0xe3): undefined reference to `boost::system::system_category()'
This is probably some linking error right? Any ideas on how I could solve it?
UPDATE #1:
I tried running it with the -lboost_filesyste and -L /usr/lib. It gives me the following error:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/crt1.o: In function `_start':
(.text+0x20): undefined reference to `main'
You are not linking the library properly. Also, as others mentioned, boost_filesystem needs also boost_system library. Use:
g++ temp.cc -o temp -lboost_system -lboost_filesystem
Command line param -l foo links libfoo.a library. If the static library is not in default library location, use command -L /custom/library/dir. But I believe /usr/lib is automatically taken into consideration by GCC.
Edit
According to your comment below it looks like you are not compiling the file with main() function, or you have a typo in main() name. Make sure that temp.cc contains one and only one of these functions:
int main();
int main(int argc, char** argv);
Of course you do remember that upper/lower case matters. :)
Boost.Filesystem uses things in Boost.System. You have to link against that, too.
The error messages that you are seeing:
/usr/lib/libboost_filesystem.a(operations.o): In function
`boost::filesystem3::detail::dir_itr_close(void*&, void*&)':
(.text+0x4d): undefined reference to `boost::system::system_category()'
that's a reference to Boost.System
Add -lboost_system and you should be good to go (or, at least better off).
Compile with -lboost_filesystem