On 25.09.18 19:38, Zach Laine via Boost wrote:
On Tue, Sep 25, 2018 at 10:29 AM Andrey Semashev via Boost < boost@lists.boost.org> wrote:
On 9/25/18 8:08 PM, John Maddock via Boost wrote:
Folks I have a bug report against Boost.Config that I don't know what (if anything) I should do about: https://github.com/boostorg/config/issues/243
The issue is this: lets say I build boost as static libraries with -fvisibilty=hidden because I want my application or shared library to *hide all boost symbols*. But there are some parts of boost which unconditionally make things visible - throw_exception is one particular culprit, but there are others, probably anything which uses BOOST_SYMBOL_VISIBLE in fact.
Question: should we support this? If so how? The only thing I can think of is a user-defined macro which when set, disables symbol visibility.
I don't think we need to support this sice the user can already hide any symbols with linker scripts.
I've seen this done, and it was extraordinarily painful. To me the need for this is a vote in favor of supporting this feature request, no against. Having said that, the only reason I know of that any of this should actually be required is in an environment where only static linking is allowed (e.g. a game console).
Is there a reason the requester could not just link to Boost dynamically?
If you have a plugin that links to boost, and this plugin should be loaded by another program that links to another version of boost, you may have symbol clashes (mostly on Linux). Dynamic linking does not help: a symbol may be overridden by a remote library. Raffi