this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2026
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Programming
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This would depend on the language/ecosystem. It's worse for C and C++ than for example Rust because of packaging policies and ease of distributability.
Hmmm, it's C++
If the dependency static links the library and doesn't use structs or classes defined in it for its interface then it is fine. If either of those are not true it is asking for trouble
Then you could be forced to vendor everything. And if it's open-source and relevant for distros to pickup, then you will need to find out if distros would be willing to take your library with its vendored libs (or package them separately just for your library)...etc.
And you may need to figure out if there are bus factor concerns with your direct dependency, since such libraries are not necessarily maintenance free, even from a mere compiling/building stand point (what if a patched indirect dependency no longer builds with new compilers...etc).