----- Original Message -----
From: "Thomas D. Dean"
#include <vector>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
int main() {
vector<string> vs;
vs.push_back("asdf");
}
If I compile with g++, I get an executable that works, i.e. runs without
error. This file is recognized by objdump and cygcheck.
If I compile with x86_64-w64-ming32-g++ -m64 t.cc -o t
I presume the 'ming32' is a typo.
Is the '-m64' necessary ?
What happens if you remove it from the command ?
I can't reproduce the error you get (either with or without '-m64'), though
I'm just running mingw in the cmd.exe shell - not under Cygwin.
the resulting executable produces an error message
./t.exe
t.exe: error while loading shared libraries: ?: cannot open shared
object file: no such file or directory.
objdump -p ./t.exe
objdump: ./t.exe: File format not recognized
I think that's to be expected - objdump expects to look at a 32-bit
executable.
I get the same error when I run objdump on a 64-bit executable.
Try:
x86_64-w64-mingw32-objdump -p ./t.exe
Cheers,
Rob
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