How to use a relative path for LDFLAGS in golang

catric mia picture catric mia · Jan 20, 2015 · Viewed 11.5k times · Source

I am trying to build a golang program which uses a static lib (.a file)

the directory struct for my project as below

└─testserver
    ├─bin
    ├─pkg
    └─src
        ├─logging
        └─testserver
            ├─libtest.a
            └─test.go

the flags for cgo in test.go as below

// #cgo LDFLAGS: -L /home/test/testserver/src/testserver -ltest
// #include "test.h"
import "C"

when I am using absolute path for LDFLAGS -L, it works fines, but when I change the path to a relative path, eg

// #cgo LDFLAGS: -L ./testserver -ltest

and then run the command

go install testserver

it returns an error to me, and says "cannot find -ltest"

my question is how can I use a relative path in LDFLAGS ? , so that I can build the project in any path.

Answer

JimB picture JimB · Jan 20, 2015

You currently can't. The directory changes between the time the command is built, and linking. For now you either need to link to an absolute path, or use the CGO_LDFLAGS environment variable.

There was a commit just after go1.4 which added a ${SRCDIR} variable which is replaced by the absolute path to the directory containing the source file at build time. https://github.com/golang/go/issues/7891. This will be in go1.5, and you can easily use it now by building Go from source.