Eliot,

Thanks for you prompt and helpful reply.  I will admit I have not tried this 
yet, but I see where you are going and think it is better to cross-post this 
into Pharo-dev so it will be searchable via the Gmane archive than to actually 
see the messages that result; I will sooner or later get to the latter.

There is still the possible problem of an errant / in the default plugins path, 
and that the vm does not provide feedback on failures, at least not that I can 
find.  Problems like I had yesterday go from a frustrating mystery to readily 
solved with a tiny hint that (in this case) is available from dlerror(); we 
should pass it along to the programmer.

Bill


====================================
Eliot Miranda eliot.miranda at gmail.com
Sun Aug 22 02:53:30 UTC 2010

What I do is manually repeat the link command using options that will cause
the linker to complain about unresolved symbols. You'll get some false
positives (dynamically-linked runtime routines) but you'll also get any
actually undefined symbols.  Use  -Wl,--warn-unresolved-symbols
-Wl,--no-allow-shlib-undefined when manually repeating the link command.

So while this is after the fact you should try remaking your plugin with the
libusb support missing, copy the link command and repeat it
adding -Wl,--warn-unresolved-symbols -Wl,--no-allow-shlib-undefined and this
tie you should see the link fail while listing libusb_close et al.

HTH
Eliot

________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of Schwab,Wilhelm K 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 10:39 PM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Pharo-project] Linux vm

It has been a long day, and it might not have needed to be so.  Within 15 
minutes of seeing "undefined symbol: libusb_close" from dlerror(), I had the 
problem not only diagnosed but fixed; seeing the error in something related to 
USB support was enough to suggest I needed to link that library into the .so I 
was trying to load.  I was still guessing, but it was an educated guess based 
on a concrete lead.

Is there a way to get such diagnostic information without hacking the vm 
source?  If not, please consider the following as a proposed patch.  I have 
tried to strike a balance between seeing enough to make sense of errant plugin 
paths and giving detailed information about failures when given an absolute 
path.  Behavior changes (I intend/think) only if something won't load (it says 
what it was trying to do) and if the library is specified by absolute path, in 
which case it gives diagnostic output on any failure to load.

Bill


( Squeak-...-src/unix/vm/sqUnixExternalPrims.c )
static void *tryLoadModule(char *in, char *name)
{
  char path[PATH_MAX], *out= path;
  void *handle= 0;
  int c;
  while ((c= *in++) && ':' != c) {      /* copy next plugin path to path[] */
    switch (c) {
    case '%':
      if ('n' == *in || 'N' == *in) {   /* replace %n with name of plugin */
        ++in;
        strcpy(out, name);
        out += strlen(name);
        continue;
      }
      if ('%' == *in) {
        ++in;
        *out++= '%';
        continue;
      }
      /* fall through... */
    default:
      *out++= c;
      continue;
    }
  }
  sprintf(out, "/" MODULE_PREFIX "%s" MODULE_SUFFIX, name);
  handle= dlopen(path, RTLD_NOW | RTLD_GLOBAL);
  fdebugf((stderr, "tryLoading(%s) = %p\n", path, handle));

        // 8-10 wks - no silent failures
        if( !handle ){
                // 8-10 - if a load fails, tell the user what we tried to load:
                fprintf(stdout, "Load failed for: %s\n", path);

                // 8-10 - is the given path absolute?  If so, try again with it
                // as given and report diagnostic information if it fails.
                if( (int)(name[0])==47 ) {
                        handle=dlopen(name, RTLD_NOW | RTLD_GLOBAL);
                        fprintf(stdout, "Load-by-name(%s) = %p\n", name, 
handle);
                        if(!handle){
                                fprintf(stdout,"Error loading library: 
%s\n",dlerror());
                        }
                }
        }

  if (!handle) {
    struct stat buf;
    if ((0 == stat(path, &buf)) && ! S_ISDIR(buf.st_mode))
      fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", dlerror());
  }

  return handle;
}

________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of Schwab,Wilhelm K 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 8:19 PM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [Pharo-project] Linux vm

Hello all,

Is there a way to get the pre-compiled linux vm to describe what the full path 
is to a library it is trying to load?    I can hack the source to do so, but 
then I start wondering what I might have disturbed in the process.  Out of the 
box, all I get is an external library with a nil handle and no clue what did or 
did not happen.

At various points in my struggle today, I saw what looked like a tendency to 
load plugins from the vmpath//so.pluginName (two slashes rather than one).  It 
raises the question of whether the code is adding an extra slash when it is not 
given an explicit plugins path??  The separate concern is that I need 
information about what is happening when one of my libraries fails to load.

One possibility is that a particular .so can't load.  How would I find out 
whether that this is case?  Is there a way to test load it or to get the vm to 
tell me the cause of a failure to load it?

Bill


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