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