If you look at the contents of the hello program you
built in the last section, you will see that it is not actually a
binary at all, but a shell script which sets up the environment so that
when the real binary is called it finds its the shared libraries in the
correct locations. Without this script, the runtime loader might not
be able to find the uninstalled libraries. Or worse, it might find an
old version and load that by mistake!
In practice, this is all part of the unified interface
libtool presents so you needn't worry about it most
of the time. The exception is when you need to look at the binary with
another program, to debug it for example:
$ ls
hello hello.lo libhello.la main.c trim.lo
hello.c hello.o libtrim.la trim.c trim.o $ libtool gdb hello
GDB is free software and you are welcome to distribute copies of it
under certain conditions; type "show copying" to see the conditions.
There is absolutely no warranty for GDB; type "show warranty" for
details.
GDB 4.18 (hppa1.0-hp-hpux10.20),
Copyright 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc...
(gdb) bre main
Breakpoint 1 at 0x5178: file main.c, line 6.
(gdb) run
Starting program: /tmp/intro-hello/.libs/hello
Breakpoint 1, main (argc=1, argv=0x7b03aa70) at main.c:6
6 return hello("World");
... |