I've downloaded lpeg source code from http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/lpeg-0.12.tar.gz
How to get the dll? I can't do it with the makefile included. I'm using mingw32.
You can use this simple batch file running from lpeg folder:
set LUA_DIR=D:\lua-5.2
gcc -O2 -shared -s -I %LUA_DIR%\src -L %LUA_DIR%\src -o lpeg.dll lptree.c lpvm.c lpcap.c lpcode.c lpprint.c -llua52
Just set LUA_DIR folder to the folder with your Lua installation; it works with both Lua 5.1 and Lua 5.2.
First change the LUADIR variable to the correct location of your Lua include files. Then add the following make target (using the correct path to your Lua DLL):
mingw: $(FILES)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -shared $(FILES) -o lpeg.dll C:\path\to\lua52.dll
I also had to change CC from gcc to mingw32-gcc, but that might just be my broken MinGW installation.
make mingw
should work now.
Related
I use QtCreator 4.15.2, clang 12.0.1.
I have "generic project" with makefile. File src/test/main.cpp contains import test.StringUtil;. QtCreator complains that module is not found. (Project builds ok, but makefile uses gcc; I'm not familiar with clang.) I tried this:
Generated .pcm file in separate directory:
clang++ -std=c++20 -fmodules --precompile -x c++-module src/test/StringUtil.cpp -o target/clang/test.StringUtil.pcm
Edited myproject.cxxflags in project root so it contains:
-std=c++20 -fmodules -fprebuilt-module-path=/home/me/myproject/target/clang -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic -fno-rtti
If I specify relative path -fprebuilt-module-path=target/clang then nothing changes; QtCreator still says that module not found. But with absolute path looks like ClangCodeModel gets disabled (crashes?): <No Symbols> in QtCreator's symbols combobox, no syntax errors reporting.
I also tried to compile in additiion to generating .pcm file, with no difference:
clang++ -std=c++20 -fmodules -c -x c++-module src/test/StringUtil.cpp -o target/build/clang/test.StringUtil.o
So: how do I make it work?
When I added support for modules in my own build system I found it easiest to specify each imported module with the flag -fmodule-file="path/to/other.pcm".
In the future I guess that the big build systems will do this aswell. since you need to preprocess the files anyway there is no extra cost. (It could be some extra work if you write your makefiles by hand though)
I don't think that qtcreators code model supports modules as of yet. I have tried but it does not work for me.
I have a sqlite extension file. The source is sqliteext/csv.c. When I build the lib with clang the output file is created at lib/csv.so.
cc -g -fPIC -I /usr/local/include -shared sqliteext/csv.c -o lib/csv.so
When I compile the lib using zig...
zig build-lib -I /usr/local/include -I /usr/include -I /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu --c-source sqliteext/csv.c -dynamic --output-dir lib
There are two problems.
zig prefixes the filename with a lib
zig add a version number thing in the suffix
so the output file is lib/libcsv.so.0.0.0
And what's interesting about this is that I need to change the filename in my extension loader (that's ok) but that I also need a symlink to handle the 0.0.0.
I'm still looking at the CLI help but I'm still not seeing the thing I need.
See https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/2230 and https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/2231
The former was fixed the same day as your post via https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/6315
I'm trying to add a .lo object file compiled through libtool with clang into a shared library file.
$ libtool --tag=CC --mode=compile clang -c newobject.c -shared
Is there an equivalent command to
$ ar r libmylib.a newobject.o
for shared libraries?
Alternatively, is there a way to dump all the .lo files that are already contained in a .so file so I can re-create tne shared library, say, using this command?
$ libtool --mode=link ld -soname libmylib.so -o libmylib.so.1 libmylib.so.0 newobject.o
There is no way to incrementally alter a shared library. You need all the component object files and rebuild the shared library from those each time.
I don't know of a way to extract object files from a shared library.
I am trying to configure util-linux to cross compile using arm-none-linux-gnueabi from CodeSourcery. My only problem so far is that it can't find my ncurses library which I compiled.
How can I add a directory to the ld search path? I've tried adding to my LIBRARY_PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH variables, but neither does anything. I know that I can add the -L flag to gcc and it will add to the linker path, but is there any way to do this globally, so that I can do it once, and not have to worry about it again?
Here is the output of arm-none-linux-gnueabi-gcc -print-search-dirs | grep libraries | sed 's/:/\n/g':
libraries
=/tools/bin/../lib/gcc/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/
/tools/bin/../lib/gcc/
/tools/bin/../lib/gcc/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/../../../../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/lib/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/
/tools/bin/../lib/gcc/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/../../../../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/lib/
/tools/bin/../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/libc/lib/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/
/tools/bin/../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/libc/lib/
/tools/bin/../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/libc/usr/lib/arm-none-linux-gnueabi/4.6.1/
/tools/bin/../arm-none-linux-gnueabi/libc/usr/lib/
I would like to add /arm/usr/lib and /arm/usr/local/lib to my ld search path.
If you need output from any other commands, just ask!
EDIT: I just found out about the CFLAGS environment variable--do all configure scripts/makefiles honor it?
Thank you!
If the ncurses library you compiled are going to be linked to the ARM binary you are cross-compiling you can not use LD_LIBRARY_PATH! LD_LIBRARY_PATH is only used by the current run-time and is in no way used by the compiler or linker when building your application.
The use of CFLAGS depends on creator of Makefile. CFLAGS are not automatically used even if they are defined as an environment variable. Only tools like the autoconf tools can pick them up from the environment and use them automagically. In the Makefiles find something like:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) ....
if this fragment exists then the Makefile uses the CFLAGS variable. LDFLAGS is the more appropriate environment variable to use for link-time options.
I am trying to include the path to extra libraries in my makefile, but I can't figure out how to get the compiler to use that path. so far I have:
g++ -g -Wall testing.cpp fileparameters.cpp main.cpp -o test
and I want to include the path to
/data[...]/lib
because testing.cpp includes files from that library. Also, I'm on a linux machine.
EDIT: Not a path to a library. Just to files that were included. My bad.
To specify a directory to search for (binary) libraries, you just use -L:
-L/data[...]/lib
To specify the actual library name, you use -l:
-lfoo # (links libfoo.a or libfoo.so)
To specify a directory to search for include files (different from libraries!) you use -I:
-I/data[...]/lib
So I think what you want is something like
g++ -g -Wall -I/data[...]/lib testing.cpp fileparameters.cpp main.cpp -o test
These compiler flags (amongst others) can also be found at the GNU GCC Command Options manual:
3.16 Options for Directory Search
In your MakeFile or CMakeLists.txt you can set CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS as below:
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -I/path/to/your/folder")
Alternatively you could setup environment variables.
Suppose you are using bash, then in ~/.bashrc, write
C_INCLUDE_PATH="/data/.../lib/:$C_INCLUDE_PATH" ## for C compiler
CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH="/data/.../lib/:$CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH" ## for Cpp compiler
export C_INCLUDE_PATH
export CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH
and source it with source ~/.bashrc.
You should be good to go.