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Home/ Questions/Q 8248451
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T23:11:33+00:00 2026-06-07T23:11:33+00:00

I am running these two commands, and I’m getting different output: $ ldd `which

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I am running these two commands, and I’m getting different output:

$ ldd `which ls`
    linux-gate.so.1 =>  (0x00db3000)
    libselinux.so.1 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libselinux.so.1 (0x00ba2000)
    librt.so.1 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/librt.so.1 (0x007bf000)
    libacl.so.1 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libacl.so.1 (0x004ce000)
    libc.so.6 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0x00110000)
    libdl.so.2 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libdl.so.2 (0x00398000)
    /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x00dea000)
    libpthread.so.0 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0 (0x00a83000)
    libattr.so.1 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libattr.so.1 (0x00d3d000)

and then

objdump -x `which ls` | grep NEEDED
  NEEDED               libselinux.so.1
  NEEDED               librt.so.1
  NEEDED               libacl.so.1
  NEEDED               libc.so.6

What’s up with that? I thought they both gave the library dependencies? The reason I care is that I suspect ldd is the correct one, but I’m working on linux on ARM, where there is no ldd from what I can tell…

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T23:11:35+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 11:11 pm

    You can see the difference in the output.

    objdump is simply dumping what the object itself lists as libraries containing unresolved symbols.

    ldd is listing which libraries ld.so would actually load. And it follows the graph backward, so that you can see what would be loaded by those libraries. Which is how libpthread.so.0 winds up in the ldd output, despite not being in the objdump output.

    So ldd is going to give a much, much better picture of what really needs to be available at runtime. But, when resolving compile/link-time problems, objdump is pretty helpful.

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