> On 29 Mar 2024, at 16:09, Olivier B. <perso.olivier.barthel...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > It is not a symlink on my system, where i built python myself, but a > 15KB so file. But it seems to lack lots of python symbols. > > Maybe what i should do is actually make libpython.so a physical copy > of libpyton311.so before linking to it, so now on any system the > module would look to load libpython.so, which could be pointing to any > version. I'll try that next
You do not link against the .so at all. All the symbols you need are defined in the python process that loads the extension. Try without the -lpython and it should just work. Barry > > Le ven. 29 mars 2024 à 10:10, Barry <ba...@barrys-emacs.org> a écrit : >> >> >> >>> On 28 Mar 2024, at 16:13, Olivier B. via Python-list >>> <python-list@python.org> wrote: >>> >>> But on Linux, it seems that linking to libpython3.so instead of >>> libpython3.11.so.1.0 does not have the same effect, and results in >>> many unresolved python symbols at link time >>> >>> Is this functionality only available on Windows? >> >> Python limited API works on linux, but you do not link against the .so on >> linux I recall. >> >> You will have missed that libpython3.so is a symlink to libpython3.11.so.10. >> >> Windows build practices do not translate one-to-one to linux, or macOS. >> >> Barry >> >> > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list