also, yes, it will be exactly the same as this except libsecp256k1
and i didn't realise i would have to distribute the binary with it this way... there is ways to make it pull all that in, but it is minimalistic, even so
I prefer static linking only when necessary. Had a long chat with some crazy smart peeps on HN a few months back about these issues. It's seems pretty equally divided on static vs dynamic linking. static is a workaround because dynamic is not as well supported as it should be IMO.
the problem with dynamic linking is where to get the fucking DLLs to get out of DLL HELL
nothing has changed since that term was coined and the easiest solution is to go static
for 99% of go projects, that aren't using GPUs or specialised libraries like secp256k1 (which you can avoid, just costs you a 4x time cost for each signature/verification)
there is even now many libraries doing standard things like hex encoding and sha256 hash functions that use AVX or whatever it's called on ARM processors now... Go compiler also understands raw assembler
For open source, I care about user freedom in the case of linking, which is why noscrypt is licensed under lgpl. I want users to be able to swap/edit libraries or build their own if they want to. Make a common ABI (usually defined in a shared header file, or interface in C#) and have fun.
i generally use CC0 these days
simple = better
i do need to learn how to build my stuff purely static tho, damn... or at least to pull in that secp256k1 library to the binary so it runs on linux, good thing i didn't try to distribute a binary!
btw, default autotools compiles seem to make the static library... you get a .a, .la (which just points at the .a as its binary) and .so in maybe several versions - at least with libsecp256k1 it was
and so i was able to do this:
mleku@iox:~/src/realy.lol/cmd/realy$ ls -lash|grep realy
23M -rwxrwxr-x 1 mleku mleku 23M Nov 10 20:16 realy
4.0K -rw-rw-r-- 1 mleku mleku 414 Oct 20 22:57 realy.service
mleku@iox:~/src/realy.lol/cmd/realy$ ldd realy
not a dynamic executable
and you see, that only added 3mb to the size of the binary and i can distribute that and it will work on any system with glib2 on amd64 architecture
this is how i did it:
mleku@iox:~/src/realy.lol$ go build --ldflags '-extldflags "-static"' -o ~/bin/realy ./cmd/realy/.
# realy.lol/cmd/realy
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000021.o: in function `mygetgrgid_r':
/_/GOROOT/src/os/user/cgo_lookup_cgo.go:45:(.text+0x44): warning: Using 'getgrgid_r' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000021.o: in function `mygetgrnam_r':
/_/GOROOT/src/os/user/cgo_lookup_cgo.go:54:(.text+0xe5): warning: Using 'getgrnam_r' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000022.o: in function `mygetgrouplist':
/_/GOROOT/src/os/user/getgrouplist_unix.go:15:(.text+0x22): warning: Using 'getgrouplist' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000004.o: in function `_cgo_04fbb8f65a5f_C2func_getaddrinfo':
/tmp/go-build/cgo-gcc-prolog:60:(.text+0x37): warning: Using 'getaddrinfo' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000021.o: in function `mygetpwnam_r':
/_/GOROOT/src/os/user/cgo_lookup_cgo.go:36:(.text+0x18a): warning: Using 'getpwnam_r' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
/usr/bin/ld: /tmp/go-link-1787515793/000021.o: in function `mygetpwuid_r':
/_/GOROOT/src/os/user/cgo_lookup_cgo.go:27:(.text+0x249): warning: Using 'getpwuid_r' in statically linked applications requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version used for linking
being that glibc has been at version 2 for like 20 years that's probably ok... and even if they do bump to a 3 there probably will be glib.so.2 libraries installed by default for a long time