Hi,
How do I create a dynamic library which uses data in the executable which uses
it?
specifically, I have this main program:
=================== main.c
#include <stdio.h>
extern int shared_func (void);
int my_int_var = 42;
int my_int_addr = &my_int_var;
int main (void) {
printf("[%d]\n",shared_func());
return 0;
}
=================== main.c
and this shared library:
=================== shared.c
extern int my_int_var;
int shared_func (void) { return my_int_var; }
=================== shared.c
this is what I get on linux:
$ gcc -fPIC -shared -o shared.so shared.c
$ gcc -o main main.c shared.so
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=. ./main
[42]
however when I try the same trick on cygwin, I get this:
$ gcc -shared -o shared.dll shared.c
/.../6/cc1e5Kdk.o:shared.c:(.text+0x4): undefined reference to `_my_int_var'
so, what do I do?
I suppose I could extract my_int_var into a separate shared library, declare it
there as __declspec(dllexport), then use it as __declspec(dllimport) in shared.c.
alas, this means that my_int_addr fails with
"error: initializer element is not constant".
so, is there a way to create a dll which would use data in the executable it
will be linked against?
thanks.
Sam.
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