| --- |
| short-description: Setting up cross-compilation |
| ... |
| |
| # Cross compilation |
| |
| Meson has full support for cross compilation. Since cross compiling is |
| more complicated than native building, let's first go over some |
| nomenclature. The three most important definitions are traditionally |
| called *build*, *host* and *target*. This is confusing because those |
| terms are used for quite many different things. To simplify the issue, |
| we are going to call these the *build machine*, *host machine* and |
| *target machine*. Their definitions are the following: |
| |
| * *build machine* is the computer that is doing the actual compiling. |
| * *host machine* is the machine on which the compiled binary will run. |
| * *target machine* is the machine on which the compiled binary's |
| output will run, *only meaningful* if the program produces |
| machine-specific output. |
| |
| The `tl/dr` summary is the following: if you are doing regular cross |
| compilation, you only care about `build_machine` and |
| `host_machine`. Just ignore `target_machine` altogether and you will |
| be correct 99% of the time. Only compilers and similar tools care |
| about the target machine. In fact, for so-called "multi-target" tools |
| the target machine need not be fixed at build-time like the others but |
| chosen at runtime, so `target_machine` *still* doesn't matter. If your |
| needs are more complex or you are interested in the actual details, do |
| read on. |
| |
| This might be easier to understand through examples. Let's start with |
| the regular, not cross-compiling case. In these cases all of these |
| three machines are the same. Simple so far. |
| |
| Let's next look at the most common cross-compilation setup. Let's |
| suppose you are on a 64 bit OSX machine and you are cross compiling a |
| binary that will run on a 32 bit ARM Linux board. In this case your |
| *build machine* is 64 bit OSX, your *host machine* is 32 bit ARM Linux |
| and your *target machine* is irrelevant (but defaults to the same |
| value as the *host machine*). This should be quite understandable as |
| well. |
| |
| The usual mistake in this case is to call the OSX system the *host* |
| and the ARM Linux board the *target*. That's because these were their |
| actual names when the cross-compiler itself was compiled! Let's assume |
| the cross-compiler was created on OSX too. When that happened the |
| *build* and *host machines* were the same OSX and different from the |
| ARM Linux *target machine*. |
| |
| In a nutshell, the typical mistake assumes that the terms *build*, |
| *host* and *target* refer to some fixed positions whereas they're |
| actually relative to where the current compiler is running. Think of |
| *host* as a *child* of the current compiler and *target* as an |
| optional *grand-child*. Compilers don't change their terminology when |
| they're creating another compiler, that would at the very least make |
| their user interface much more complex. |
| |
| The most complicated case is when you cross-compile a cross compiler. |
| As an example you can, on a Linux machine, generate a cross compiler |
| that runs on Windows but produces binaries on MIPS Linux. In this case |
| *build machine* is x86 Linux, *host machine* is x86 Windows and |
| *target machine* is MIPS Linux. This setup is known as the [Canadian |
| Cross](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler#Canadian_Cross). |
| As a side note, be careful when reading cross compilation articles on |
| Wikipedia or the net in general. It is very common for them to get |
| build, host and target mixed up, even in consecutive sentences, which |
| can leave you puzzled until you figure it out. |
| |
| Again note that when you cross-compile something, the 3 systems |
| (*build*, *host*, and *target*) used when building the cross compiler |
| don't align with the ones used when building something with that |
| newly-built cross compiler. To take our Canadian Cross scenario from |
| above (for full generality), since its *host machine* is x86 Windows, |
| the *build machine* of anything we build with it is *x86 Windows*. And |
| since its *target machine* is MIPS Linux, the *host machine* of |
| anything we build with it is *MIPS Linux*. Only the *target machine* |
| of whatever we build with it can be freely chosen by us, say if we |
| want to build another cross compiler that runs on MIPS Linux and |
| targets Aarch64 iOS. As this example hopefully makes clear to you, the |
| machine names are relative and shifted over to the left by one |
| position. |
| |
| If you did not understand all of the details, don't worry. For most |
| people it takes a while to wrap their head around these concepts. |
| Don't panic, it might take a while to click, but you will get the hang |
| of it eventually. |
| |
| ## Defining the environment |
| |
| Meson requires you to write a cross build definition file. It defines |
| various properties of the cross build environment. The cross file |
| consists of different sections. |
| |
| There are a number of options shared by cross and native files, |
| [here](Machine-files.md). It is assumed that you have read that |
| section already, as this documentation will only call out options |
| specific to cross files. |
| |
| ### Binaries |
| |
| ```ini |
| [binaries] |
| exe_wrapper = 'wine' # A command used to run generated executables. |
| ``` |
| |
| The `exe_wrapper` option defines a *wrapper command* that can be used |
| to run executables for this host. In this case we can use Wine, which |
| runs Windows applications on Linux. Other choices include running the |
| application with qemu or a hardware simulator. If you have this kind |
| of a wrapper, these lines are all you need to write. Meson will |
| automatically use the given wrapper when it needs to run host |
| binaries. This happens e.g. when running the project's test suite. |
| |
| ### Properties |
| |
| In addition to the properties allowed in [all machine |
| files](Machine-files.md#properties), the cross file may contain |
| specific information about the cross compiler or the host machine. It |
| looks like this: |
| |
| ```ini |
| [properties] |
| sizeof_int = 4 |
| sizeof_wchar_t = 4 |
| sizeof_void* = 4 |
| |
| alignment_char = 1 |
| alignment_void* = 4 |
| alignment_double = 4 |
| |
| has_function_printf = true |
| |
| sys_root = '/some/path' |
| pkg_config_libdir = '/some/path/lib/pkgconfig' |
| ``` |
| |
| In most cases you don't need the size and alignment settings, Meson |
| will detect all these by compiling and running some sample programs. |
| If your build requires some piece of data that is not listed here, |
| Meson will stop and write an error message describing how to fix the |
| issue. If you need extra compiler arguments to be used during cross |
| compilation you can set them with `[langname]_args = [args]`. Just |
| remember to specify the args as an array and not as a single string |
| (i.e. not as `'-DCROSS=1 -DSOMETHING=3'`). |
| |
| *Since 0.52.0* The `sys_root` property may point to the root of the |
| host system path (the system that will run the compiled binaries). |
| This is used internally by Meson to set the PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR |
| environment variable for pkg-config. If this is unset the host system |
| is assumed to share a root with the build system. |
| |
| *Since 0.54.0* The pkg_config_libdir property may point to a list of |
| path used internally by Meson to set the PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR environment |
| variable for pkg-config. This prevents pkg-config from searching cross |
| dependencies in system directories. |
| |
| One important thing to note, if you did not define an `exe_wrapper` in |
| the previous section, is that Meson will make a best-effort guess at |
| whether it can run the generated binaries on the build machine. It |
| determines whether this is possible by looking at the `system` and |
| `cpu_family` of build vs host. There will however be cases where they |
| do match up, but the build machine is actually not compatible with the |
| host machine. Typically this will happen if the libc used by the build |
| and host machines are incompatible, or the code relies on kernel |
| features not available on the build machine. One concrete example is a |
| macOS build machine producing binaries for an iOS Simulator x86-64 |
| host. They're both `darwin` and the same architecture, but their |
| binaries are not actually compatible. In such cases you may use the |
| `needs_exe_wrapper` property to override the auto-detection: |
| |
| ```ini |
| [properties] |
| needs_exe_wrapper = true |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Machine Entries |
| |
| The next bit is the definition of host and target machines. Every |
| cross build definition must have one or both of them. If it had |
| neither, the build would not be a cross build but a native build. You |
| do not need to define the build machine, as all necessary information |
| about it is extracted automatically. The definitions for host and |
| target machines look the same. Here is a sample for host machine. |
| |
| ```ini |
| [host_machine] |
| system = 'windows' |
| cpu_family = 'x86' |
| cpu = 'i686' |
| endian = 'little' |
| ``` |
| |
| These values define the machines sufficiently for cross compilation |
| purposes. The corresponding target definition would look the same but |
| have `target_machine` in the header. These values are available in |
| your Meson scripts. There are three predefined variables called, |
| surprisingly, `build_machine`, `host_machine` and `target_machine`. |
| Determining the operating system of your host machine is simply a |
| matter of calling `host_machine.system()`. |
| |
| There are two different values for the CPU. The first one is |
| `cpu_family`. It is a general type of the CPU. This should have a |
| value from [the CPU Family table](Reference-tables.md#cpu-families). |
| *Note* that Meson does not add `el` to end cpu_family value for little |
| endian systems. Big endian and little endian mips are both just |
| `mips`, with the `endian` field set appropriately. |
| |
| The second value is `cpu` which is a more specific subtype for the |
| CPU. Typical values for a `x86` CPU family might include `i386` or |
| `i586` and for `arm` family `armv5` or `armv7hl`. Note that CPU type |
| strings are very system dependent. You might get a different value if |
| you check its value on the same machine but with different operating |
| systems. |
| |
| If you do not define your host machine, it is assumed to be the build |
| machine. Similarly if you do not specify target machine, it is assumed |
| to be the host machine. |
| |
| |
| ## Starting a cross build |
| |
| |
| Once you have the cross file, starting a build is simple |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson srcdir builddir --cross-file cross_file.txt |
| ``` |
| |
| Once configuration is done, compilation is started by invoking `meson compile` |
| in the usual way. |
| |
| ## Introspection and system checks |
| |
| The main *meson* object provides two functions to determine cross |
| compilation status. |
| |
| ```meson |
| meson.is_cross_build() # returns true when cross compiling |
| meson.can_run_host_binaries() # returns true if the host binaries can be run, either with a wrapper or natively |
| ``` |
| |
| You can run system checks on both the system compiler or the cross |
| compiler. You just have to specify which one to use. |
| |
| ```meson |
| build_compiler = meson.get_compiler('c', native : true) |
| host_compiler = meson.get_compiler('c', native : false) |
| |
| build_int_size = build_compiler.sizeof('int') |
| host_int_size = host_compiler.sizeof('int') |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Mixing host and build targets |
| |
| Sometimes you need to build a tool which is used to generate source |
| files. These are then compiled for the actual target. For this you |
| would want to build some targets with the system's native compiler. |
| This requires only one extra keyword argument. |
| |
| ```meson |
| native_exe = executable('mygen', 'mygen.c', native : true) |
| ``` |
| |
| You can then take `native_exe` and use it as part of a generator rule or anything else you might want. |
| |
| ## Using a custom standard library |
| |
| Sometimes in cross compilation you need to build your own standard |
| library instead of using the one provided by the compiler. Meson has |
| built-in support for switching standard libraries transparently. The |
| invocation to use in your cross file is the following: |
| |
| ```ini |
| [properties] |
| c_stdlib = ['mylibc', 'mylibc_dep'] # Subproject name, variable name |
| ``` |
| |
| This specifies that C standard library is provided in the Meson |
| subproject `mylibc` in internal dependency variable `mylibc_dep`. It |
| is used on every cross built C target in the entire source tree |
| (including subprojects) and the standard library is disabled. The |
| build definitions of these targets do not need any modification. |
| |
| Note that it is supported for any language, not only `c`, using `<lang>_stdlib` |
| property. |
| |
| Since *0.56.0* the variable name parameter is no longer required as long as the |
| subproject calls `meson.override_dependency('c_stdlib', mylibc_dep)`. |
| The above example becomes: |
| |
| ```ini |
| [properties] |
| c_stdlib = 'mylibc' |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Changing cross file settings |
| |
| Cross file settings are only read when the build directory is set up |
| the first time. Any changes to them after the fact will be ignored. |
| This is the same as regular compiles where you can't change the |
| compiler once a build tree has been set up. If you need to edit your |
| cross file, then you need to wipe your build tree and recreate it from |
| scratch. |
| |
| ## Custom data |
| |
| You can store arbitrary data in `properties` and access them from your |
| Meson files. As an example if you cross file has this: |
| |
| ```ini |
| [properties] |
| somekey = 'somevalue' |
| ``` |
| |
| then you can access that using the `meson` object like this: |
| |
| ```meson |
| myvar = meson.get_external_property('somekey') |
| # myvar now has the value 'somevalue' |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Cross file locations |
| |
| As of version 0.44.0 Meson supports loading cross files from system |
| locations (except on Windows). This will be |
| $XDG_DATA_DIRS/meson/cross, or if XDG_DATA_DIRS is undefined, then |
| /usr/local/share/meson/cross and /usr/share/meson/cross will be tried |
| in that order, for system wide cross files. User local files can be |
| put in $XDG_DATA_HOME/meson/cross, or ~/.local/share/meson/cross if |
| that is undefined. |
| |
| The order of locations tried is as follows: |
| - A file relative to the local dir |
| - The user local location |
| - The system wide locations in order |
| |
| Distributions are encouraged to ship cross files either with their |
| cross compiler toolchain packages or as a standalone package, and put |
| them in one of the system paths referenced above. |
| |
| These files can be loaded automatically without adding a path to the |
| cross file. For example, if a ~/.local/share/meson/cross contains a |
| file called x86-linux, then the following command would start a cross |
| build using that cross files: |
| |
| ```sh |
| meson builddir/ --cross-file x86-linux |
| ``` |