| --- |
| 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. |
| |
| It should be noted that this is only guaranteed to work for subprojects |
| that are built with Meson. The reason is the simple fact that there is |
| no possible way to do this reliably with mixed build systems. Because of |
| this, only meson subprojects are described here. |
| [CMake based subprojects](CMake-module.md#CMake-subprojects) are also |
| supported but not guaranteed to work. |
| |
| ## A subproject example |
| |
| Usually dependencies consist of some header files plus a library to link against. |
| To declare this internal dependency use `declare_dependency` function. |
| |
| As an example, suppose we have a simple project that provides a shared |
| library. Its `meson.build` would look like this. |
| |
| ```meson |
| project('libsimple', 'c') |
| |
| inc = include_directories('include') |
| libsimple = shared_library('simple', |
| 'simple.c', |
| include_directories : inc, |
| install : true) |
| |
| libsimple_dep = declare_dependency(include_directories : inc, |
| link_with : libsimple) |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Naming convention for dependency variables |
| |
| Ideally the dependency variable name should be of `<project_name>_dep` form. |
| This way one can just use it without even looking inside build definitions of that subproject. |
| |
| In cases where there are multiple dependencies need to be declared, the default one |
| should be named as `<project_name>_dep` (e.g. `gtest_dep`), and others can have |
| `<project_name>_<other>_<name>_dep` form (e.g. `gtest_main_dep` - gtest with main function). |
| |
| There may be exceptions to these rules where common sense should be applied. |
| |
| ### Build options in subproject |
| |
| 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. |
| |
| ## Using a subproject |
| |
| All subprojects must be inside `subprojects` directory. |
| The `subprojects` directory must be at the top level of your project. |
| Subproject declaration must be in your top level `meson.build`. |
| |
| ### A simple example |
| |
| Let's use `libsimple` as a subproject. |
| |
| At the top level of your project create `subprojects` directory. |
| Then copy `libsimple` into `subprojects` directory. |
| |
| Your project's `meson.build` should look like this. |
| |
| ```meson |
| project('my_project', 'cpp') |
| |
| libsimple_proj = subproject('libsimple') |
| libsimple_dep = libsimple_proj.get_variable('libsimple_dep') |
| |
| executable('my_project', |
| 'my_project.cpp', |
| dependencies : libsimple_dep, |
| install : true) |
| ``` |
| |
| Note that the subproject object is *not* used as the dependency, but |
| rather you need to get the declared dependency from it with |
| `get_variable` because a subproject may have multiple declared |
| dependencies. |
| |
| ### Toggling between system libraries and embedded sources |
| |
| When building distro packages it is very important that you do not |
| embed any sources. Some distros have a rule forbidding embedded |
| dependencies so your project must be buildable without them or |
| otherwise the packager will hate you. |
| |
| Here's how you would use system libraries and fall back to embedding sources |
| if the dependency is not available. |
| |
| ```meson |
| project('my_project', 'cpp') |
| |
| libsimple_dep = dependency('libsimple', required : false) |
| |
| if not libsimple_dep.found() |
| libsimple_proj = subproject('libsimple') |
| libsimple_dep = libsimple_proj.get_variable('libsimple_dep') |
| endif |
| |
| executable('my_project', |
| 'my_project.cpp', |
| dependencies : libsimple_dep, |
| install : true) |
| ``` |
| |
| Because this is such a common operation, Meson provides a shortcut for |
| this use case. |
| |
| ```meson |
| dep = dependency('foo', fallback : [subproject_name, variable_name]) |
| ``` |
| |
| The `fallback` keyword argument takes two items, the name of the |
| subproject and the name of the variable that holds the dependency. If |
| you need to do something more complicated, such as extract several |
| different variables, then you need to do it yourself with the manual |
| method described above. |
| |
| Using this shortcut the build definition would look like this. |
| |
| ```meson |
| project('my_project', 'cpp') |
| |
| libsimple_dep = dependency('libsimple', fallback : ['libsimple', 'libsimple_dep']) |
| |
| executable('my_project', |
| 'my_project.cpp', |
| dependencies : libsimple_dep, |
| install : true) |
| ``` |
| |
| With this setup when libsimple is provided by the system, we use it. When |
| that is not the case we use the embedded version (the one from subprojects). |
| |
| Note that `libsimple_dep` can point to an external or an internal dependency but |
| you don't have to worry about their differences. Meson will take care |
| of the details for you. |
| |
| ### Subprojects depending on other subprojects |
| |
| 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](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md). |
| |
| ## Command-line options |
| |
| The usage of subprojects can be controlled by users and distros with |
| the following command-line options: |
| |
| * **--wrap-mode=nodownload** |
| |
| Meson will not use the network to download any subprojects or |
| fetch any wrap information. Only pre-existing sources will be used. |
| This is useful (mostly for distros) when you want to only use the |
| sources provided by a software release, and want to manually handle |
| or provide missing dependencies. |
| |
| * **--wrap-mode=nofallback** |
| |
| Meson will not use subproject fallbacks for any dependency |
| declarations in the build files, and will only look for them in the |
| system. Note that this does not apply to unconditional subproject() |
| calls, and those are meant to be used for sources that cannot be |
| provided by the system, such as copylibs. |
| |
| * **--wrap-mode=forcefallback** |
| |
| Meson will not look at the system for any dependencies which have |
| subproject fallbacks available, and will *only* use subprojects for |
| them. This is useful when you want to test your fallback setup, or |
| want to specifically build against the library sources provided by |
| your subprojects. |
| |
| ## Download subprojects |
| |
| *Since 0.49.0* |
| |
| Meson will automatically download needed subprojects during configure, unless |
| **--wrap-mode=nodownload** option is passed. It is sometimes preferable to |
| download all subprojects in advance, so the meson configure can be performed |
| offline. The command-line `meson subprojects download` can be used for that, it |
| will download all missing subprojects, but will not update already fetched |
| subprojects. |
| |
| ## Update subprojects |
| |
| *Since 0.49.0* |
| |
| Once a subproject has been fetched, Meson will not update it automatically. |
| For example if the wrap file tracks a git branch, it won't pull latest commits. |
| |
| To pull latest version of all your subprojects at once, just run the command: |
| `meson subprojects update`. |
| - If the wrap file comes from wrapdb, the latest version of the wrap file will |
| be pulled and used next time meson reconfigure the project. This can be |
| triggered using `meson --reconfigure`. Previous source tree is not deleted, to |
| prevent from any loss of local changes. |
| - If the wrap file points to a git commit or tag, a checkout of that commit is |
| performed. |
| - If the wrap file points to a git branch, and the current branch has the same |
| name, a `git pull` is performed. |
| - If the wrap file points to a git branch, and the current branch is different, |
| it is skipped. Unless `--rebase` option is passed in which case |
| `git pull --rebase` is performed. |
| |
| ## Start a topic branch across all git subprojects |
| |
| *Since 0.49.0* |
| |
| The command-line `meson subprojects checkout <branch_name>` will checkout a |
| branch, or create one with `-b` argument, in every git subprojects. This is |
| useful when starting local changes across multiple subprojects. It is still your |
| responsibility to commit and push in each repository where you made local |
| changes. |
| |
| To come back to the revision set in wrap file (i.e. master), just run |
| `meson subprojects checkout` with no branch name. |
| |
| ## Execute a command on all subprojects |
| |
| *Since 0.51.0* |
| |
| The command-line `meson subprojects foreach <command> [...]` will |
| execute a command in each subproject directory. For example this can be useful |
| to check the status of subprojects (e.g. with `git status` or `git diff`) before |
| performing other actions on them. |
| |
| ## Why must all subprojects be inside a single directory? |
| |
| There are several reasons. |
| |
| First of all, to maintain any sort of sanity, the system must prevent going |
| inside other subprojects with `subdir()` or variations thereof. Having the |
| subprojects in well defined places makes this easy. If subprojects could be |
| anywhere at all, it would be a lot harder. |
| |
| Second of all it is extremely important that end users can easily see what |
| subprojects any project has. Because they are in one, and only one, place, |
| reviewing them becomes easy. |
| |
| This is also a question of convention. Since all Meson projects have the same |
| layout w.r.t subprojects, switching between projects becomes easier. You don't |
| have to spend time on a new project traipsing through the source tree looking |
| for subprojects. They are always in the same place. |
| |
| Finally if you can have subprojects anywhere, this increases the possibility of |
| having many different (possibly incompatible) versions of a dependency in your |
| source tree. Then changing some code (such as changing the order you traverse |
| directories) may cause a completely different version of the subproject to be |
| used by accident. |