[RK_2014_0920]ubuntu下,使用ldconfig解决:error while loading shared libraries: libpcap.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

一、问题描述
编写一个与libpcap有关的程序:test_libpcap.cpp,编译test_libpcap.o成功。

注:之前已经成功安装libpcap,libpcap.so.1.5.3的路径是:/home/test/work/lib;
test_libpcap.cpp的路径是/home/test/work/test_libpcap。

运行test_libpcap.o出现以下提示:

test_libpcap.o: error while loading shared libraries: libpcap.so.1.5.3: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

 

二、问题解决
注:以下操作均需要root权限
1.定位“libpcap.so.1.5.3”的路径

# locate libpcap.so.1.5.3

/home/test/work/lib/libpcap.so.1.5.3

/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libpcap.so.1.5.3

/usr/local/lib/libpcap.so.1.5.3

2.将上述路径中的“/home/test/work/lib/libpcap.so.1.5.3”加入“/etc/ld.so.conf.d”中

# cd /etc/ld.so.conf.d

# ls

i686-linux-gnu.conf libc.conf

# echo "# libpcap default configuration" >> libpcap.conf

# echo "/home/test/work/lib/libpcap.so.1.5.3" >> libpcap.conf

3.运行ldconfig命令

# /sbin/ldconfig

4.再次运行test_libpcap.o,成功。

 

三、参考信息

1.man locate

locate(1)                   General Commands Manual                  locate(1)







NAME

       locate - find files by name





SYNOPSIS

       locate [OPTION]... PATTERN...





DESCRIPTION

       locate  reads  one or more databases prepared by updatedb(8) and writes

       file names matching at least one of the PATTERNs  to  standard  output,

       one per line.



       If  --regex is not specified, PATTERNs can contain globbing characters.

       If any PATTERN contains no globbing characters, locate  behaves  as  if

       the pattern were *PATTERN*.



       By default, locate does not check whether files found in database still

       exist (but it does require all parent directories to exist if the data‐

       base  was built with --require-visibility no).  locate can never report

       files created after the most recent update of the relevant database.





EXIT STATUS

       locate exits with status 0 if any match was  found  or  if  locate  was

       invoked  with  one  of the --limit 0, --help, --statistics or --version

       options.  If no match was found  or  a  fatal  error  was  encountered,

       locate exits with status 1.



       Errors  encountered while reading a database are not fatal, search con‐

       tinues in other specified databases, if any.





OPTIONS

       -A, --all

              Print only entries that match all PATTERNs instead of  requiring

              only one of them to match.





       -b, --basename

              Match  only  the base name against the specified patterns.  This

              is the opposite of --wholename.





       -c, --count

              Instead of writing file names on standard output, write the num‐

              ber of matching entries only.





       -d, --database DBPATH

              Replace  the  default database with DBPATH.  DBPATH is a :-sepa‐

              rated list of database file names.  If more than one  --database

              option  is  specified,  the resulting path is a concatenation of

              the separate paths.



              An empty database file name is replaced by the default database.

              A  database file name - refers to the standard input.  Note that

              a database can be read from the standard input only once.





       -e, --existing

              Print only entries that refer to  files  existing  at  the  time

              locate is run.





       -L, --follow

              When  checking  whether files exist (if the --existing option is

              specified), follow trailing symbolic links.  This causes  broken

              symbolic links to be omitted from the output.



              This  is  the  default  behavior.  The opposite can be specified

              using --nofollow.





       -h, --help

              Write a summary of the available options to standard output  and

              exit successfully.





       -i, --ignore-case

              Ignore case distinctions when matching patterns.





       -l, --limit, -n LIMIT

              Exit  successfully  after finding LIMIT entries.  If the --count

              option is specified, the resulting  count  is  also  limited  to

              LIMIT.





       -m, --mmap

              Ignored, for compatibility with BSD and GNU locate.





       -P, --nofollow, -H

              When  checking  whether files exist (if the --existing option is

              specified), do not follow trailing symbolic links.  This  causes

              broken symbolic links to be reported like other files.



              This is the opposite of --follow.





       -0, --null

              Separate  the  entries  on  output using the ASCII NUL character

              instead of writing each entry on a separate line.   This  option

              is  designed  for interoperability with the --null option of GNU

              xargs(1).





       -S, --statistics

              Write statistics about each read  database  to  standard  output

              instead of searching for files and exit successfully.





       -q, --quiet

              Write  no  messages  about  errors encountered while reading and

              processing databases.





       -r, --regexp REGEXP

              Search for a basic regexp REGEXP.  No PATTERNs  are  allowed  if

              this  option  is used, but this option can be specified multiple

              times.





       --regex

              Interpret all PATTERNs as extended regexps.





       -s, --stdio

              Ignored, for compatibility with BSD and GNU locate.





       -V, --version

              Write information about the version and  license  of  locate  on

              standard output and exit successfully.





       -w, --wholename

              Match only the whole path name against the specified patterns.



              This  is  the  default  behavior.  The opposite can be specified

              using --basename.





EXAMPLES

       To search for a file named exactly NAME (not *NAME*), use

              locate -b '\NAME'

       Because \ is a globbing character, this disables the implicit  replace‐

       ment of NAME by *NAME*.





FILES

       /var/lib/mlocate/mlocate.db

              The database searched by default.





ENVIRONMENT

       LOCATE_PATH

              Path  to  additional databases, added after the default database

              or the databases specified using the --database option.





NOTES

       The order in which the requested databases are  processed  is  unspeci‐

       fied,  which  allows  locate  to reorder the database path for security

       reasons.



       locate attempts to be compatible to slocate (without the  options  used

       for  creating  databases)  and  GNU locate, in that order.  This is the

       reason for the impractical default --follow option and for the  confus‐

       ing set of --regex and --regexp options.



       The  short  spelling  of  the  -r option is incompatible to GNU locate,

       where it corresponds to the --regex option.  Use the long option  names

       to avoid confusion.



       The  LOCATE_PATH  environment variable replaces the default database in

       BSD and GNU locate, but it is added to other databases in  this  imple‐

       mentation and slocate.





AUTHOR

       Miloslav Trmac <[email protected]>





SEE ALSO

       updatedb(8)







mlocate                            Sep 2012                          locate(1)
View Code

2.man ldconfig

LDCONFIG(8)                Linux Programmer's Manual               LDCONFIG(8)







NAME

       ldconfig - configure dynamic linker run-time bindings



SYNOPSIS

       /sbin/ldconfig  [  -nNvXV ] [ -f conf ] [ -C cache ] [ -r root ] direc‐

       tory ...

       /sbin/ldconfig -l [ -v ] library ...

       /sbin/ldconfig -p



DESCRIPTION

       ldconfig creates the necessary links  and  cache  to  the  most  recent

       shared  libraries  found  in  the  directories specified on the command

       line, in the file /etc/ld.so.conf, and in the trusted directories (/lib

       and  /usr/lib).  The cache is used by the run-time linker, ld.so or ld-

       linux.so.  ldconfig checks the header and filenames of the libraries it

       encounters  when  determining  which  versions  should have their links

       updated.



       ldconfig will attempt to deduce the type of ELF libs  (i.e.,  libc5  or

       libc6/glibc)  based  on  what  C  libs,  if any, the library was linked

       against.



       Some existing libs do not  contain  enough  information  to  allow  the

       deduction  of  their  type.  Therefore, the /etc/ld.so.conf file format

       allows the specification of an expected type.  This is  used  only  for

       those   ELF   libs   which   we  can  not  work  out.   The  format  is

       "dirname=TYPE", where TYPE can be libc4, libc5, or libc6.  (This syntax

       also works on the command line.)  Spaces are not allowed.  Also see the

       -p option.  ldconfig should normally be run by the superuser as it  may

       require write permission on some root owned directories and files.



OPTIONS

       -v     Verbose  mode.   Print  current version number, the name of each

              directory as it is scanned, and  any  links  that  are  created.

              Overrides quiet mode.



       -n     Only  process  directories specified on the command line.  Don't

              process the trusted directories (/lib and  /usr/lib)  nor  those

              specified in /etc/ld.so.conf.  Implies -N.



       -N     Don't rebuild the cache.  Unless -X is also specified, links are

              still updated.



       -X     Don't update links.  Unless -N is also specified, the  cache  is

              still rebuilt.



       -f conf

              Use conf instead of /etc/ld.so.conf.



       -C cache

              Use cache instead of /etc/ld.so.cache.



       -r root

              Change to and use root as the root directory.



       -l     Library mode.  Manually link individual libraries.  Intended for

              use by experts only.



       -p     Print the lists of directories and candidate libraries stored in

              the current cache.



FILES

       /lib/ld.so          run-time linker/loader

       /etc/ld.so.conf     File  containing  a list of colon, space, tab, new‐

                           line, or comma-separated directories  in  which  to

                           search for libraries.

       /etc/ld.so.cache    File  containing an ordered list of libraries found

                           in the directories specified in /etc/ld.so.conf, as

                           well as those found in /lib and /usr/lib.



SEE ALSO

       ldd(1), ld.so(8)



COLOPHON

       This  page  is  part of release 3.54 of the Linux man-pages project.  A

       description of the project, and information about reporting  bugs,  can

       be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.







GNU                               2012-05-10                       LDCONFIG(8)
View Code

 

四、原文网址[原文发布于2014-09-20 09:56]

 http://www.cnblogs.com/tom-and-jerry/p/3978092.html

 

【完结】                      

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