On Feb 27, 2006, at 08:51, Robert Ramey wrote:
*** Hmmm - I'll look into this. I would have expected that additional code would be generated if and only if
// if no archive headers have been included this is a no op // this is to permit BOOST_EXPORT etc to be included in a // file declaration header #if ! defined(BOOST_ARCHIVE_BASIC_ARCHIVE_HPP) #define BOOST_CLASS_EXPORT_GUID_ARCHIVE_LIST(T, K, ASEQ)
which I would expect would make a BOOST_EXPORT an effective no-op if no archive files are included.
I'll chime in, as I'm having exactly the same issue, but on darwin/
gcc-4 with code in multiple dynamically loaded libraries... (I have
other issues too, I get to those later)
The problem is that although export.hpp is only included once per
generated .o file, there are multiple .o files all including the same
headers - and each therefore generates the same template
instantiations, thereby causing the multiple definitions during
linking. Also - the same headers may be included in multiple shared
libraries, exacerbating the problem with the same code instantiated
into multiple libraries - a serious problem if there are singletons.
I may not be understanding this correctly - here's what >I< think
needs to happen - please correct me.
For any derived class, there is a set of code (templates) that need
to be instantiated for each archive type (specifically, the list
boost::archive::detail::known_archive_types::type, for the templates
guid_initializer<T> and export_instantiate