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Full Discussion: Shared Object Question
Top Forums Programming Shared Object Question Post 302501725 by Corona688 on Friday 4th of March 2011 11:38:00 AM
Old 03-04-2011
I'm not sure what this code is supposed to prove, since it's not doing anything remotely like what you've described your actual project trying to do.

You can export your own symbols into the library. You can't export something else's symbols. How can you possibly export something you never have? These dependencies remain unresolved up until runtime!

You do seem to be able to have a library import your definition of a static member, much to my surprise. So if it's complaining about being doubly defined, that's because it is. Take the extra definition out of your library.
 

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deb-shlibs(5)							    dpkg suite							     deb-shlibs(5)

NAME
deb-shlibs - Debian shared library information file DESCRIPTION
shlibs files map shared library names and versions (sonames) to dependencies suitable for a package control file. There is one entry per line. Blank lines are not allowed. Lines beginning with an # character are considered commentary, and are ignored. All other lines must have the format [type:] library version dependencies The library and version fields are whitespace-delimited, but the dependencies field extends to the end of the line. The type field is optional and normally not needed. The dependencies field has the same syntax as the Depends field in a binary control file, see deb-control(5). EXAMPLES
The shlibs file for a typical library package, named libcrunch1, that provides one library whose soname is libcrunch.so.1, might read libcrunch 1 libcrunch1 (>= 1.2-1) The dependencies must mention the most recent version of the package that added new symbols to the library: in the above example, new symbols were added to version 1.2 of libcrunch. This is not the only reason the dependencies might need to be tightened. SEE ALSO
deb-control(5), dpkg-shlibdeps(1), deb-symbols(5). 1.19.0.5 2018-04-16 deb-shlibs(5)
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