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Date:      Thu, 15 May 2003 09:01:37 -0700 (PDT)
From:      John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
To:        stable@freebsd.org
Cc:        dl@leo.org
Subject:   Re: __stderrp problem again with tk83
Message-ID:  <200305151601.h4FG1b0m015682@strings.polstra.com>
In-Reply-To: <20030515082750.GC47407@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de>
References:  <20030513113145.GA42435@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de> <891553987.20030513151537@xs4all.nl> <20030513133337.GF42435@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de> <20030515082750.GC47407@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de>

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In article <20030515082750.GC47407@atrbg11.informatik.tu-muenchen.de>,
Daniel Lang  <dl@leo.org> wrote:
> 
> maybe to clarify things for me, please answer the following
> question:
> 
> On a recent System (FreeBSD 4.8-STABLE #15: Wed Apr  9 10:08:16 CEST 2003),
> is it valid, that an object file from a just compiled source
> contains one of the as-it-seems obsoleted stdin/out symbols?
> In my case the symbol: "__stderrp".
> 
> More precisely: can the following code from tkFont.c
> [..]
> fprintf(stderr, "Font %s still in cache.\n",=20
>                 Tcl_GetHashKey(&fiPtr->fontCache, searchPtr));
> [..]
> 
> result in the following (then undefined) symbol:
> 
> > atrbg11:/usr/ports/x11-toolkits/tk83/work/tk8.3.5/unix#nm tkFont.o | grep=
>  stderrp=20
> >          U __stderrp

Yes, it is correct that a freshly-compiled object file contains a
reference to "__stderrp".  That is exactly how things should be.

That symbol should be resolved from "/usr/lib/libc.so":

    thin$ objdump -T /usr/lib/libc.so | grep __stderrp
    0008749c g    DO .data  00000004 __stderrp

So either you have an out-of-date libc, or else your application is
finding the wrong version of libc.  Figure out why that is, and your
problem will be solved.

John
-- 
  John Polstra
  John D. Polstra & Co., Inc.                        Seattle, Washington USA
  "Two buttocks cannot avoid friction."                     -- Malawi saying



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