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Home/ Questions/Q 807057
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T00:20:41+00:00 2026-05-15T00:20:41+00:00

Situation is following. I have shared library, which contains class definition – QueueClass :

  • 0

Situation is following. I have shared library, which contains class definition –

QueueClass : IClassInterface
{
   virtual void LOL() { do some magic}
}

My shared library initialize class member

QueueClass *globalMember = new QueueClass();

My share library export C function which returns pointer to globalMember –

void * getGlobalMember(void) { return globalMember;}

My application uses globalMember like this

((IClassInterface*)getGlobalMember())->LOL();

Now the very uber stuff – if i do not reference LOL from shared library, then LOL is not linked in and calling it from application raises exception. Reason – VTABLE contains nul in place of pointer to LOL() function.

When I move LOL() definition from .h file to .cpp, suddenly it appears in VTABLE and everything works just great.
What explains this behavior?! (gcc compiler + ARM architecture_)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T00:20:41+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 12:20 am

    The linker is the culprit here. When a function is inline it has multiple definitions, one in each cpp file where it is referenced. If your code never references the function it is never generated.

    However, the vtable layout is determined at compile time with the class definition. The compiler can easily tell that the LOL() is a virtual function and needs to have an entry in the vtable.

    When it gets to link time for the app it tries to fill in all the values of the QueueClass::_VTABLE but doesn’t find a definition of LOL() and leaves it blank(null).

    The solution is to reference LOL() in a file in the shared library. Something as simple as &QueueClass::LOL;. You may need to assign it to a throw away variable to get the compiler to stop complaining about statements with no effect.

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