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Home/ Questions/Q 418475
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T18:40:56+00:00 2026-05-12T18:40:56+00:00

I’d like to experiment with Google’s tcmalloc on Linux… I have a huge project

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I’d like to experiment with Google’s tcmalloc on Linux… I have a huge project here, with hundreds of qmake generated Makefile’s… I’d like to find a way to get gcc to globally link against tcmalloc (like it does with libc)… Is this possible? Or will I have to edit every Makefile?

(I’d prefer not to edit all the pro files as there are hundreds of them)

(Also, we’ve already tried the LD_PRELOAD method and it’s not working quite right)…

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T18:40:56+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 6:40 pm

    How do your makefiles access the compiler (gcc/g++/cc/c++)?

    If it’s just by name (g++), and not by explicit path (/usr/bin/g++), you can simply create a replacement g++ in whatever directory you prefer, and prepend that directory to your path.

    E.g.: Create a   ~/mytmpgccdir/g++   file:

    #!/bin/tcsh -f
    exec /usr/bin/g++ -Lfoo -lfoo $*:q
    

    Adding whatever extras (-Lfoo -lfoo) you like, either before or after the other arguments ($*:q).

    Then pre-pend it to your path and make normally.

    #tcsh version
    % set path = ( ~/mytmpgccdir/  $path:q )
    % make clean
    % make
    

    p.s. If it is by explicit name, you may be able to override it on the command line. Something like:   make all GCC=~/mytmpgccdir/gcc

    p.p.s If you do use LD_PRELOAD, you might want a script like this to setenv LD_PRELOAD before running your program. Otherwise it’s easy to wind up LD_PRELOAD’ing on every command like /bin/ls, make, g++, etc.

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