whystatic.xml 3.4 KB

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  1. <sect1 id="ch05-whystatic">
  2. <title>Why do we use static linking?</title>
  3. <?dbhtml filename="whystatic.html" dir="chapter05"?>
  4. <para>Thanks to Plasmatic for posting the text on which this is mainly
  5. based to one of the LFS mailing lists.</para>
  6. <para>When making (compiling) a program, rather than having to rewrite all the
  7. functions for dealing with the kernel, hardware, files, etc. every time you
  8. write a new program, all these basic functions are instead kept in libraries.
  9. glibc, which you install later, is one of these major libraries, which
  10. contains code for all the basic functions programs use, like opening files,
  11. printing information on the screen, and getting feedback from the user. When
  12. the program is compiled, these libraries of code are linked together with the
  13. new program, so that it can use any of the functions that the library
  14. has.</para>
  15. <para>However, these libraries can be very large (for example, libc.a
  16. can often be around 2.5MB), so you may not want a separate copy of each
  17. library attached to the program. Just imagine if you had a simple command
  18. like ls with an extra 2.5MB attached to it! Instead of making the library
  19. an actual part of the program, or statically linked, the library is kept a
  20. separate file, which is loaded only when the program needs it. This is what
  21. we call dynamically linked, as the library is loaded and unloaded dynamically,
  22. as the program needs it.</para>
  23. <para>So now we have a 1KB file and a 2.5MB file, but we still haven't saved any
  24. space (except maybe RAM until the library is needed). The REAL advantage to
  25. dynamically linked libraries is that we only need one copy of the library.
  26. If <filename>ls</filename> and <filename>rm</filename> both use the same
  27. library, then we don't need two copies of the
  28. library, as they can both get the code from the same file.
  29. Even when in memory, both programs share the same code, rather than loading
  30. duplicates into memory. So not only are we saving hard disk space, but also
  31. precious RAM.</para>
  32. <para>If dynamic linking saves so much room, then why are we making everything
  33. statically linked? Well, that's because when you chroot into your brand new
  34. (but very incomplete) LFS environment, these dynamic libraries won't be
  35. available because they are somewhere else in your old directory tree
  36. (<filename>/usr/lib</filename> for example) which won't be accessible
  37. from within your LFS root (<filename>$LFS</filename>).</para>
  38. <para>So in order for your new programs to run inside the chroot environment you
  39. need to make sure that the libraries are statically linked when you build
  40. them, hence the <userinput>--enable-static-link</userinput>,
  41. <userinput>--disable-shared</userinput>, and
  42. <userinput>-static</userinput> flags used
  43. through Chapter 5. Once in Chapter 6, the first thing we do is build the
  44. main set of system libraries, glibc. Once this is made we start rebuilding
  45. all the programs we just did in Chapter 5, but this time dynamically linked,
  46. so that we can take advantage of the space saving opportunities.</para>
  47. <para>And there you have it, that's why you need to use those weird
  48. <userinput>-static</userinput> flags. If you try building everything
  49. without them, you'll see very quickly what
  50. happens when you chroot into your newly crippled LFS system.</para>
  51. <para>If you want to know more about Dynamically Linked Libraries, consult a
  52. book or website on programming, especially a Linux-related site.</para>
  53. </sect1>