How to apply -fvisibility option to symbols in static libraries?

Steve Fallows picture Steve Fallows · Feb 8, 2010 · Viewed 39.2k times · Source

I have a shared library project that is built from 4 static libraries (.a) and one object (.o) file. I am trying to add the -fvisibility=hidden option to restrict symbols in the output to only those that I mark in the source with an __attribute__.

I've added the -fvisibility=hidden option to the compile options for the .so project (which covers the .o file) and for the .a projects.

The symbols in the object file are removed as expected from the final .so. However the symbols from the .a projects are all still in the final .so file. Adding the -fvisibility=hidden option to the .so link command has no effect.

What am I doing wrong?

My purpose here is to remove from the .so all symbols except the interface functions to the library.

EDIT: I actually used a version map to solve this for now. However it requires continued maintenance of the version script as external symbols change. Accepted answer has a better idea.

Answer

fons picture fons · Feb 13, 2013

Simply pass -Wl,--exclude-libs,ALL to gcc

This will tell the linker to transform all the symbols in the static libraries to hidden.

--exclude-libs also accepts a list of archives (i.e. static library names) for finer granularity on which libraries to hide symbols from.

Note: this will only work in systems using GNU binutils (e.g. Linux) or with a linker supporting --exclude-libs (e.g. it won't work with OSX's ld64)