short-description: Using meson projects as subprojects within other meson projects ...

Subprojects

Some platforms do not provide a native packaging system. In these cases it is common to bundle all third party libraries in your source tree. This is usually frowned upon because it makes it hard to add these kinds of projects into e.g. those Linux distributions that forbid bundled libraries.

Meson tries to solve this problem by making it extremely easy to provide both at the same time. The way this is done is that Meson allows you to take any other Meson project and make it a part of your build without (in the best case) any changes to its Meson setup. It becomes a transparent part of the project. The basic idiom goes something like this.

dep = dependency('foo', fallback : [subproject_name, variable_name]

As an example, suppose we have a simple project that provides a shared library. It would be set up like this.

project('simple', 'c')
i = include_directories('include')
l = shared_library('simple', 'simple.c', include_directories : i, install : true)
simple_dep = declare_dependency(include_directories : i,
  link_with : l)

Then we could use that from a master project. First we generate a subdirectory called subprojects in the root of the master directory. Then we create a subdirectory called simple and put the subproject in that directory. Now the subproject can be used like this.

project('master', 'c')
dep = dependency('simple', fallback : ['simple', 'simple_dep']
exe = executable('prog', 'prog.c',
                 dependencies : dep, install : true)

With this setup the system dependency is used when it is available, otherwise we fall back on the bundled version. If you wish to always use the embedded version, then you would declare it like this:

simple_sp = subproject('simple')
dep = simple_sp.get_variable('simple_dep')

All Meson features of the subproject, such as project options keep working and can be set in the master project. There are a few limitations, the most important being that global compiler arguments must be set in the main project before calling subproject. Subprojects must not set global arguments because there is no way to do that reliably over multiple subprojects. To check whether you are running as a subproject, use the is_subproject function.

It should be noted that this only works for subprojects that are built with Meson. It can not be used with any other build system. The reason is the simple fact that there is no possible way to do this reliably with mixed build systems.

Subprojects can use other subprojects, but all subprojects must reside in the top level subprojects directory. Recursive use of subprojects is not allowed, though, so you can't have subproject a that uses subproject b and have b also use a.

Obtaining subprojects

Meson ships with a dependency system to automatically obtain dependency subprojects. It is documented in the Wrap dependency system manual.