Undefined symbols error when using a header file

Chris Cummings picture Chris Cummings · Jun 4, 2010 · Viewed 8.7k times · Source

I'm getting the following error and can't for the life of me figure out what I'm doing wrong.

$ gcc main.c -o main

Undefined symbols:
  "_wtf", referenced from:
      _main in ccu2Qr2V.o
ld: symbol(s) not found
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status

main.c:

#include <stdio.h>
#include "wtf.h"

main(){
    wtf();
}

wtf.h:

void wtf();

wtf.c:

void wtf(){
    printf("I never see the light of day.");
}

Now, if I include the entire function in the header file instead of just the signature, it complies fine so I know wtf.h is being included. Why doesn't the compiler see wtf.c? Or am I missing something?

Regards.

Answer

qrdl picture qrdl · Jun 4, 2010

You need to link wtf with your main. Easiest way to compile it together - gcc will link 'em for you, like this:

gcc main.c wtf.c -o main

Longer way (separate compilation of wtf):

gcc -c wtf.c
gcc main.c wtf.o -o main

Even longer (separate compilation and linking)

gcc -c wtf.c
gcc -c main.c
gcc main.o wtf.o -o main

Instead of last gcc call you can run ld directly with the same effect.