Re: [HACKERS] dynamic libraries
Matthew N. Dodd <winter@jurai.net>
From: "Matthew N. Dodd" <winter@jurai.net>
To: Bruce Momjian <maillist@candle.pha.pa.us>
Cc: lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu, Bill.Allie@mug.org, hackers@postgreSQL.org
Date: 1998-10-12T16:18:13Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On Mon, 12 Oct 1998, Bruce Momjian wrote: > Just to comment. If we use -R or -rpath, people need to use that for > _every_ application that uses libpq, etc. That seems like a pain to me. The alternative is more painful. If PostgreSQL were the only application package installed on a system your LD_LIBRARY_PATH would be really short. > B1ecause people have not had problems in the past using ld.so.conf, and I > can see them having problems with -R or -rpath, I would hesistate to > change it, though I can see why some installations would prefer the > -R/-rpath. I'll continue to ignore the fact that some ELF systems do have a bastardized runtime linker and use ld.so.conf when I state that ELF systems have no ld.so.conf, so its LD_LIBRARY_PATH or -R/--rpath (I looked up the flag finally.) ld.so.conf or ldconfig with various directories on the command line is necessary for a non-ELF system; this is the way you do things. ELF fixes this (the problem is when you have a zillion different directories to search for libraries in and it starts taking a long time to start dynamically linked programs on a loaded system. I'll assume everyoen sees the security problems with a system wide library path.) So for a.out or other non-ELF systems, I'm proposing no change; do whatever works. For ELF, the specification supports compiled in library search paths; lets use them. Asking the system administrator to keep track of another library path is most assuming. -R/--rpath also makes it simpler for non-root users to install PostgreSQL. -- | Matthew N. Dodd | 78 280Z | 75 164E | 84 245DL | FreeBSD/NetBSD/Sprite/VMS | | winter@jurai.net | This Space For Rent | ix86,sparc,m68k,pmax,vax | | http://www.jurai.net/~winter | Are you k-rad elite enough for my webpage? |