the title of this question is an exact dupe, but the answers in that question don't help me.
I have a bunch of object files packed in a static library:
% g++ -std=c++98 -fpic -g -O1 -c -o foo.o foo.cpp
% g++ -std=c++98 -fpic -g -O1 -c -o bar.o bar.cpp
% ar -rc libsome.a foo.o bar.o
I'd like to generate libsome.so from libsome.a instead of the object files, but the library is really barebones:
% g++ -std=c++98 -fpic -g -O1 -shared -o libsome.so libsome.a
% nm -DC libsome.so
0000xxxx A _DYNAMIC
0000xxxx A _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_
w _Jv_RegisterClasses
0000xxxx A __bss_start
w __cxa_finalize
0000xxxx A _edata
0000xxxx A _end
0000xxxx T _fini
0000xxxx T _init
the static library is ok, or at least I'm perfectly able to link it to an executable and have it run the contained functionality. also, everything is fine if I create libsome.so from foo.o and bar.o.
Assuming you're using the GNU linker, you need to specify the --whole-archive option so that you'll get all the contents of the static archive. Since that's an linker option, you'll need -Wl to tell gcc to pass it through to the linker:
g++ -std=c++98 -fpic -g -O1 -shared -o libsome.so -Wl,--whole-archive libsome.a
If you were doing something more complicated where you want all of library some but only the part of library support needed by libsome, you would want to turn off whole archive after you've used it on libsome:
... -Wl,--whole-archive libsome.a -Wl,--no-whole-archive libsupport.a
If you're not using the GNU linker, you'll need to see if your linker supports it and what it's called. On the Sun linker, it's called -z allextract
and -z defaultextract
.