A huge barrier that newcomers to C++ face is that of undefined references. We create a project, include a few headers and BOOM, linker error.

In fact, searches for "undefined reference" do not trail that far behind searches for "clang".

Google Trends, "clang" (red) vs "undefined reference" (blue)

Why is this?

Well, unlike most languages, C++ splits code into headers and implementations. Public headers define the interface for your code - the types, memory layout, available functions, etc. The implementations define how it works.

/* foo.h */ # ifndef FOO_H # define FOO_H int foo () ; # endif

There is a function call foo, that returns an int

/* foo.cpp */ int foo () { return 1 + 2 ; }

foo returns 1 + 2

Undefined references occur when you depend on a header, but not on the corresponding translation-unit(s).

Some have argued that this is a reason not to have headers at all. Indeed, Java avoids the use of headers because it makes things simpler:

Source code written in Java is simple. There is no preprocessor, no #define and related capabilities, no typedef, and absent those features, no longer any need for header files. Instead of header files, Java language source files provide the definitions of other classes and their methods.

Section 2.2.1 of the Java Language Environment white paper

But maybe this isn't a failure of the language, but a failure of our build-systems.

Using the compiler, a build-system can figure out the list of headers that your project uses. It's not difficult, either.

Suppose we have a project like this:

$ tree . . ├── foo │ ├── bar.cpp │ ├── bar.h │ ├── baz │ │ └── baz.h │ ├── foo.cpp │ └── foo.h ├── main.cpp └── qux ├── qux.cpp └── qux.h 3 directories, 7 files

Then we can find the include-graph for main.cpp like this:

$ gcc -I . -MM ./main.cpp main.o: main.cpp foo/foo.h foo/bar.h foo/baz/baz.h qux/qux.h

So we can figure out the set of headers that a given translation-unit depends on. Now, we need to ensure that if we depend on any header, we also link to the library target that it belongs to.

In this case, we depend on foo/foo.h, which is implemented by foo/foo.cpp in the target foo, and qux/qux.h, which is implemented by qux/qux.cpp in target qux.

Library Target Header(s) Translation-unit(s) foo foo/bar.h foo/bar.cpp foo/baz/baz.h foo/foo.cpp foo/foo.h qux qux/qux.h qux/qux.cpp

So we need to introduce a rule:

If you include header X then you must also link to the library target that X belongs to

With this rule in place, we cannot just forget to link bar.o, qux.o or foo.o. If we try, then the build-system will detect this, and tell us where we went wrong.

To support this, targets in the build-system must declare every header-file that belongs to it. Otherwise, we have no way of knowing where a header should come from.

This is quite practical, if you use globs:

cxx_library( name = 'foo' , exportd_headers = subdir_glob([ ( 'foo' , '**/*.h' ), ]), srcs = glob([ 'foo/**/*.cpp' , ]), ) cxx_library( name = 'qux' , exportd_headers = subdir_glob([ ( 'qux' , '**/*.h' ), ]), srcs = glob([ 'qux/**/*.cpp' , ]), )

In summary:

Headers are not necessarily evil.

We can query the compiler for actual header-usage.

Build targets should declare the header-files (not directories) they export.

The build-system should enforce that if you include a header-file, you must link to its corresponding library target.

Notes