cvsdave
cvsdave

Reputation: 1606

In LINUX determine if a .a library/archive 32-bit or 64-bit?

We distribute in Linux a static lib in both 64-bit and 32-bit versions. When troubleshooting a customer, I would like my diagnostic shell script to quickly eliminate the issue by checking the .a archive file to detetmine whether it is 32 or 64 bit. The methods that occur to me are less than elegant:

  1. extract a .o member and ask the "file" command (e.g., ELF 32-bit etc)

  2. start including a dummy member coded to indicate, e.g. 32bit.o/64bit.o and use "ar -t" to check

I have tried "strings xyz.a | grep 32" but this doesn't work well over versions. Not a heartbreaker problem, but if you know of an elegant solution, I would like to know.

Upvotes: 91

Views: 99608

Answers (5)

pankaj kapoor
pankaj kapoor

Reputation: 483

The simplest way is to use the file command.

$ file <.so file or .a file>

Upvotes: 41

Anya Shenanigans
Anya Shenanigans

Reputation: 94584

oops, that missing sed means that it was displaying to many items.

Just in an answer:

count=$(nm foo.a | grep '^0' | head -1 | sed 's/ .*//' | wc -c)
((count == 17)) && echo 64bit
((count == 9)) && echo 32bit
((count == 0)) && echo '??bit'

How it's supposed to work:

  • nm - get the symbols from the library
  • grep - get lines starting with a hex string (address of symbol in file)
  • head - get the first line
  • sed - remove everything past the whitespace, including the whitespace
  • wc - count the number of characters.

In a 32 bit environment, you get addresses made up of 8 hex digits, adding the new line gives you 9, In a 64bit environment, you get addresses made up of 16 hex digits, adding the new line gives you 17.

Upvotes: 6

Erik
Erik

Reputation: 187

Just use the file command; i.e. file library.so

Upvotes: 17

caf
caf

Reputation: 239011

objdump seems like the best way:

objdump -f libfoo.a | grep ^architecture

Upvotes: 131

ColWhi
ColWhi

Reputation: 1077

If there are functions that are specific to a particular version you could try nm then grep for the function.

Upvotes: 1

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