问题
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- How to change entry point of C program with gcc? 4 answers
My software has one main for normal use and a different one for unit tests. I would just love it if there was an option to gcc to specify which "main" function to use.
回答1:
Put them in separate files, and specify one .c file for normal use, and one .c file for testing.
Alternately, #define
testing on the commandline using test builds and use something like:
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
#ifdef TESTING
return TestMain(argc, argv);
#else
return NormalMain(argc, argv);
#endif
}
int TestMain(int argc, char *argv[])
{
// Do testing in here
}
int NormalMain(int argc, char *argv[])
{
//Do normal stuff in here
}
回答2:
The other answers here are quite reasonable, but strictly speaking the problem you have is not really one with GCC, but rather with the C runtime. You can specify an entry point to your program using the -e
flag to ld
. My documentation says:
-e symbol_name
Specifies the entry point of a main executable. By default the entry name is "start" which is found in crt1.o which contains the glue code need to set up and call main().
That means you can override the entry point if you like, but you may not want to do that for a C program you intend to run normally on your machine, since start
might do all kinds of OS specific stuff that's required before your program runs. If you can implement your own start
, you could do what you want.
回答3:
I'm assuming that you're using Make or something similar. I would create two files that contain different implementations of the main function, then in the makefile, define two separate targets that have identical dependencies on the rest of your files, except one uses your "unit test main" and the other your "normal main". Something like this:
normal: main_normal.c file1.c file2.c
unittest: main_unittest.c file1.c file2.c
As long as the "normal" target is closer to the top of the makefile, then typing "make" will choose it by default. You would have to type "make unittest" to build your test target.
回答4:
You can use macros to rename one function to main.
#ifdef TESTING
#define test_main main
#else
#define real_main main
#endif
int test_main( int argc, char *argv[] ) { ... }
int real_main( int argc, char *argv[] ) { ... }
回答5:
I'd tend to use different files and make for testing and production builds, but if you did have a file with
int test_main (int argc, char*argv[])
and
int prod_main (int argc, char*argv[])
then the compiler options to select one or the other as the main are -Dtest_main=main
and -Dprod_main=main
回答6:
I had the same problem today: m1.c and m2.c both had a main function but needed to be linked and run one of them. Solution: user STRIP to remove the main symbol from one of them after compilation but before linking:
gcc -c m1.c m2.c; strip --strip-symbol main m1.o; gcc m1.o m2.o; ./a.out
will run main from m2
gcc -c m1.c m2.c; strip --strip-symbol main m2.o; gcc m1.o m2.o; ./a.out
will run main from m1
Without strip:
gcc - m1.c m2.c
m2.o: In function `main':
m2.c:(.text+0x0): multiple definition of `main'
m1.o:m1.c:(.text+0x0): first defined here
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
回答7:
Edit: Billy beat me to the answer, but here's a bit more background
More directly, main is usually more a function of the standard library. The thing that calls main
isn't C, but rather the standard library. The OS loads the application, transfers control to the library's entry point (_start
in GCC), and the library ultimately calls main
. This is why the entry point for a windows application can be WinMain
, and not the usual. Embedded programming can have the same sort of thing. If you don't have a standard library, you have to write the entry point that the library normally provides (among other things), and you can name it whatever you want.
In the GCC toolchain, you can also replace the library's entry point with your own by using the -e
option. (For that matter, you can also remove the library entirely.)
Make your own:
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
#if defined(BUILD_UNIT_TESTS)
return main_unittest(argc, argv);
#endif
#if defined(BUILD_RUNTIME)
return main_run(argc, argv);
#endif
}
If you don't like ifdef
, then write two main modules that contain only main. Link one in for unit tests and the other in for normal use.
回答8:
You may have to run ld
separately to use them, but ld supports scripts to define many aspects of the output file (including the entry point).
回答9:
First of all, you can't have two functions named main
in one compilation, so either the sources are in different files or you're using conditional compilation. Either way you've got to get two different .o files out. Therefore, you don't need a linker option; you just pass the .o file that you want in as an argument.
If you don't like that, you can do fancy things with dlopen()
to pull main
from any object file you name dynamically. I can imagine circumstances where this might be useful—say, you take a systematic approach to unit tests, just put them all in a directory, and your code walks the directory, grabbing each object file, dynamically loading it, and running its tests. But to get started, something simpler is probably indicated.
回答10:
If you use into LD "-e symbol_name"
(where symbol_name is your main function, of course) you need also "-nostartfiles"
otherwise error of "undefined reference to main"
will be produced.
回答11:
#ifdef TESTING
int main()
{
/* testing code here */
}
#else
int main()
{
/* normal code here */
}
#endif
$ gcc -DTESTING=1 -o a.out filename.c #building for testing
$ gcc -UTESTING -o a.out filename.c #building for normal purposes
man gcc
showed me the -D and -U
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3097825/is-there-a-gcc-compiler-linker-option-to-change-the-name-of-main