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Home/ Questions/Q 7995679
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 4, 20262026-06-04T14:29:31+00:00 2026-06-04T14:29:31+00:00

I am on Linux(Ubuntu) with OpenCV 2.4 installed. I am try to use Eclipse

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I am on Linux(Ubuntu) with OpenCV 2.4 installed. I am try to use Eclipse to create an opencv project. When I build the project, I got collect2: ld returned 1 exit status error which I guess is caused by missing libs. Then I put libraries in this project, but I find every lib has three very similar brothers, like:

libopencv_highgui.so
libopencv_highgui.so.2.4
libopencv_highgui.so.2.4.0

So, which one should I add to project libraries? And what’s the different between them?

Best Regards.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-04T14:29:35+00:00Added an answer on June 4, 2026 at 2:29 pm

    libopencv_highgui.so and libopencv_highgui.so.2.4 are probably symbolic links to libopencv_highgui.so.2.4.0.

    Libraries frequently do this so that software that needs to link against specific versions can while keeping the generic library also exposed.

    This is mainly useful when a program to be linked against a major or minor version of a library. Consider if a legacy application needed to link against version 1.2 of libopencv_highgui. The program couldn’t link against libopencv_highgui.so because that’s not guaranteed to be the correct version. However, the program could link against libopencv_highgui.so.1.2. libopencv_highgui.so.1.2 may be a symbolic link to libopencv_highgui.so.1.2.3, but that would be ok since the third number usually means a minor bug fix that won’t break compatibility.

    So this brings up which file you should link against. This really depends. Unless you need to depend on some bug or quirk of a specific minor revision, I would definitely avoid linking against the 2.4.0 one. That ties your program specifically to version 2.4.0. When 2.4.1 gets released (or trickles down your distro’s package manager), it probably won’t break your program.

    If you link against libopencv_highgui.so and then 2.5 is installed as the main lib (and then libopencv_highgui.so links to libopencv_highgui.so.2.5.0), there is a chance that your program will not link correctly since the second number does sometimes mean compatibility changes.

    So in short, if it’s a personal project, just link to whatever you want. libopencv_highgui.so is probably safe if it’s personal. If it’s going to be distributed, figure out what versions of the library your code will link properly against and then use the vaguest one possible. For example, if your code works with 2.2, 2.3 and 2.4, you should go ahead and link to libopencv_highgui.so. If it only works specifically with 2.4.0, you should link with libopencv_highgui.so.2.4.0. If it will work with any sub revision of 2.4, you should go with libopencv_highgui.so.2.4.

    Basically you have to make a choice about what you think will link properly on the most people’s setups.

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