I have a C++ application that I inherited, which consists of:
- My main app
- Several app-specific libraries (libapp1, libapp2, etc...)
- Several "third party" libraries (most "third partis are just other teams in the company") linked from both the main app, from the app-specific libappX libraries, and from other 3rd part libraries - e.g. libext1, libext2, etc...
In other words, my code looks like this:
// main.C
#include <app1/a1l1.H>
#include <app2/a2l1.H>
#include <ext1/e1l1.H>
// app1/a1l1.H
#include <app1/a1l2.H>
#include <ext2/e2l1.H>
// app2/a2l1.H
#include <ext2/e2l2.H>
// ext1/e1l1.H
#include <ext3/e3l1.H>
// ext3/e3l1.H
#include <ext4/e4l1.H>
QUESTIONs:
1) How can I tell which libraries have been linked into the final executable? This must include statically linked ones
In other words, I want an answer of "app1, app2, ext1, ext2, ext3, ext4"
Ideally, the answer would be available from the executable itself (I have a debug version of it built in case it makes it more possible). If that's impossible, i'd like to know if there's a simple code analysis tool (iedeally something within gcc itself) to provide that analysis.
Please note that the object files for external libraries are already built, so looking at the build logs to see what was linked, I'm worried that "ext4" won't show up in the log since we won't be building "ext3" library that is already pre-built.
NOTE: running "nmake" with DEPS set to yes to rebuild all the is NOT an option. But i DO have access to the full source code for external libraries.
2) A slightly separate and less important question, how can i tell a list of all the include files used in the entire source tree I'm building. Again, ideally frm already-built executable, which i have a debug version of.
=================
UPDATE: Just to clarify, our libraries are linked statically, so ldd
(List Synamic Dependencies) does not work.
Also, the answer can be either for Solaris or Linux - doesn't matter.
I tried using nm
but that doesn't list the libraries
Try to use
ldd
+ your filename, this will list the libs.As far as I know, not much information about static libraries is preserved when linking (since the linker just sees that library as a collection of *.o objects anyway).
If you find the make command that links the final executable and add a
-v
flag,g++
will show you exactly how it calls theld
command. This should include all necessary static libraries, including libraries used by other libraries, or otherwise the link step would fail. But it might also include extra libraries that aren't actually used.Another possibly useful thing is that, at least on Linux, objects and executables usually store names of the source code files from which they were created. (Filename only, no path.) Try
I'll answer your second question first. You can simply use the
-H
or-M
flag to see all (including system) headers processed in the compilation.gcc -H main.c
should do the trick. Seeing which headers are included will actually get you on the right track to finding which static libraries were linked in.You could use
objdump
on your final object (orreadelf
on your final binary) to get the names of all the functions in there. You'd then have to go find the libraries from which the functions were pulled in, but that's a bit cumbersome. You'd definitely have to make a script to minimize the pain.Someone else mentioned using
gcc <stuff> -Wl,-verbose
which simply passes the-verbose
flag to the linker. That's a perfect way to get a list of shared libraries (.so files), but you said yours are static, so that isn't the way to go in this case.Good luck!
I had similar problem and found solution: add -Wl,--verbose option when linking. It will switch linker to verbose mode:
Here is example output:
Update: You can also use -Wl,--trace option instead of -Wl,--verbose. It will also give you list of libraries, but is less verbose.
Update 2: -Wl,--trace does not display libraries included indirectly. Example: you link with libA, and libA was linked with libB. If you want to see that libB is needed too, you must use -Wl,--verbose.
For direct dependencies;
Indirect/All dependencies;