Consider the situation when a C++ project is built and shipped within a Centos 7
virtual machine or container. Default gcc
for Centos 7
is 4.8
. In order to allow developers to use modern C++, the more recent version of gcc
(for example, 6.3
) is installed into Centos 7 which runs as a CI server. This provides -std=c++14
support.
[builder@f7279ae9f33f build (master %)]$ /usr/bin/c++ -v 2>&1 | grep version
gcc version 4.8.5 20150623 (Red Hat 4.8.5-28) (GCC)
[builder@f7279ae9f33f build (master %)]$ /opt/rh/devtoolset-6/root/usr/bin/c++ -v 2>&1 | grep version
gcc version 6.3.1 20170216 (Red Hat 6.3.1-3) (GCC)
export CXX=/opt/rh/devtoolset-6/root/usr/bin/c++
make all -j4
...
This is short example of compilation and linkage command:
[ 78%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/merge_operator_string.cpp.o
/opt/rh/devtoolset-6/root/usr/bin/c++ -Ducsdos_EXPORTS -I/home/builder/src/dos/libucsdos/./src -I/home/builder/src/dos/libucsdos/./include -I/home/builder/src/dos/libucsdos/build/schema/cpp -I/home/builder/src/dos/libucsdos/build/schema -isystem /usr/local/include -O2 -g -DNDEBUG -fPIC -frtti -pedantic -Wall -Wextra -Wcast-align -Wcast-qual -Wctor-dtor-privacy -Wdisabled-optimization -Wformat=2 -Winit-self -Wlogical-op -Wmissing-declarations -Wmissing-include-dirs -Wnoexcept -Wold-style-cast -Woverloaded-virtual -Wredundant-decls -Wshadow -Wsign-conversion -Wsign-promo -Wstrict-null-sentinel -Wstrict-overflow=5 -Wswitch-default -Wundef -Werror -Wno-unused -std=gnu++14 -o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/merge_operator_string.cpp.o -c /home/builder/src/dos/libucsdos/src/merge_operator_string.cpp
[ 80%] Linking CXX shared library libucsdos.so
/usr/bin/cmake3 -E cmake_link_script CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/link.txt --verbose=1
/opt/rh/devtoolset-6/root/usr/bin/c++ -fPIC -O2 -g -DNDEBUG -shared -Wl,-soname,libucsdos.so.0 -o libucsdos.so.0.3.23 CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/c.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/crdt_2p_set.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/crdt_pn_counter.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/errors.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/merge_index_document.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/merge_index_segment.cpp.o CMakeFiles/ucsdos.dir/src/merge_operator_string.cpp.o -Wl,-rpath,/usr/local/lib: schema/libschema.a /usr/lib64/librocksdb.so /usr/lib64/libjemalloc.so /usr/local/lib/libgrpc++_reflection.so /usr/local/lib/libgrpc++.so /usr/local/lib/libgrpc.so -ldl -lgrpc++ /usr/lib64/libprotobuf.so -lpthread /usr/lib64/libprotobuf-lite.so
Anyway, the resulting artifacts appear to be linked with system default version of libstdc++
:
[builder@f7279ae9f33f build (master %)]$ ldd libucsdos.so | grep libstdc++.so.6
libstdc++.so.6 => /lib64/libstdc++.so.6 (0x00007f2a4a054000)
It's easy to find out that /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
version is 4.8.5
:
[builder@f7279ae9f33f build (master %)]$ yum whatprovides "/lib64/libstdc++.so.6"
libstdc++-4.8.5-28.el7_5.1.x86_64 : GNU Standard C++ Library
Repo : @Updates
Matched from:
Filename : /lib64/libstdc++.so.6
Is this build environment configuration valid?
Yes. The
devtoolset-6-gcc-c++
package provides a custom version of GCC that uses a special linker script instead of a dynamic library forlibstdc++.so
. That means the binaries it produces do not depend on the newerlibstdc++.so.6
and can be run on other CentOS machines that don't have devtoolset installed (i.e. they only have the older libstdc++ library from GCC 4.8).Yes. What you're seeing is completely normal, and how it's supposed to work.
The pieces of the newer C++ runtime from GCC 6.4.0 get statically linked into your binary, and at runtime it only depends on the old
libstdc++.so
which every CentOS system has installed.That's the whole point of the devtoolset version of GCC.