Issue
I have my project currently compiling under gcc. It uses Boost, ZeroMQ as static .a
libraries and some .so
libraries like SDL. I want to go clang all the way but not right now. I wonder if it is possible to compile code that uses .a
and .so
libraries that were compiled under gcc with clang?
Solution
Yes, you usually can use clang
with GCC compiled libraries (and vice versa, use gcc
with CLANG compiled libraries), because in fact it is not compilation but linking which is relevant. You might be unlucky and get unpleasant suprises.
You could in principle have some dependencies on the version of libstdc++
used to link the relevant libraries (if they are coded in C++). Actually, that usually does not matter much.
In C++, name mangling might in theory be an issue (there might be some corner cases, even incompatibilities between two different versions of g++
). Again, in practice it is usually not an issue.
So usually you can mix CLANG (even different but close versions of it) with GCC but you may have unpleasant surprises. What should be expected from any C++ compiler (be it CLANG or GCC) is just to be able to compile and link an entire software (and all libraries) together using the same compiler and version (and that includes the same C++ standard library implementation). This is why upgrading a compiler in a distribution is a lot of work: the distribution makers have to ensure that all the packages compile well (and they do get surprises!).
Beware that the version of libstdc++ does matter. Both Clang & GCC communities work hard to make its ABI compatible for compiler upgrades, but there are subtle corner cases. Read the documentation of your particular and specific C++ standard library implementation. These corner cases could explain mysterious crashes when using a good C++ library binary (compiled with GCC 5) in your code compiled with GCC 8. The bug is not in the library, but the ABI evolved incompatibly.
Answered By - Basile Starynkevitch Answer Checked By - Terry (WPSolving Volunteer)