| # Reference manual |
| |
| ## Functions |
| |
| The following functions are available in build files. Click on each to |
| see the description and usage. The objects returned by them are [list |
| afterwards](#returned-objects). |
| |
| ### add_global_arguments() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void add_global_arguments(arg1, arg2, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Adds the positional arguments to the compiler command line. This |
| function has two keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `language`: specifies the language(s) that the arguments should be |
| applied to. If a list of languages is given, the arguments are added |
| to each of the corresponding compiler command lines. Note that there |
| is no way to remove an argument set in this way. If you have an |
| argument that is only used in a subset of targets, you have to specify |
| it in per-target flags. |
| |
| - `native` *(since 0.48.0)*: a boolean specifying whether the arguments should be |
| applied to the native or cross compilation. If `true` the arguments |
| will only be used for native compilations. If `false` the arguments |
| will only be used in cross compilations. If omitted, the flags are |
| added to native compilations if compiling natively and cross |
| compilations (only) when cross compiling. |
| |
| The arguments are used in all compiler invocations with the exception |
| of compile tests, because you might need to run a compile test with |
| and without the argument in question. For this reason only the |
| arguments explicitly specified are used during compile tests. |
| |
| **Note:** Usually you should use `add_project_arguments` instead, |
| because that works even when you project is used as a subproject. |
| |
| **Note:** You must pass always arguments individually `arg1, arg2, |
| ...` rather than as a string `'arg1 arg2', ...` |
| |
| ### add_global_link_arguments() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void add_global_link_arguments(*arg1*, *arg2*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Like `add_global_arguments` but the arguments are passed to the linker. |
| |
| ### add_languages() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| bool add_languages(*langs*) |
| ``` |
| |
| Add programming languages used by the project. Equivalent to having |
| them in the `project` declaration. This function is usually used to |
| add languages that are only used under some conditions, like this: |
| |
| ```meson |
| project('foobar', 'c') |
| if compiling_for_osx |
| add_languages('objc') |
| endif |
| if add_languages('cpp', required : false) |
| executable('cpp-app', 'main.cpp') |
| endif |
| ``` |
| |
| Takes the following keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `required`: defaults to `true`, which means that if any of the languages |
| specified is not found, Meson will halt. *(since 0.47.0)* The value of a |
| [`feature`](Build-options.md#features) option can also be passed. |
| |
| - `native` *(since 0.54.0)*: if set to `true`, the language will be used to compile for the build |
| machine, if `false`, for the host machine. |
| |
| Returns `true` if all languages specified were found and `false` otherwise. |
| |
| If `native` is omitted, the languages may be used for either build or host |
| machine, but are never required for the build machine. (i.e. it is equivalent |
| to `add_languages(*langs*, native: false, required: *required*) and |
| add_languages(*langs*, native: true, required: false)`. This default behaviour |
| may change to `native: false` in a future Meson version. |
| |
| ### add_project_arguments() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void add_project_arguments(arg1, arg2, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function behaves in the same way as `add_global_arguments` except |
| that the arguments are only used for the current project, they won't |
| be used in any other subproject. |
| |
| ### add_project_link_arguments() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void add_project_link_arguments(*arg1*, *arg2*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Like `add_project_arguments` but the arguments are passed to the linker. |
| |
| ### add_test_setup() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void add_test_setup(*name*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Add a custom test setup that can be used to run the tests with a |
| custom setup, for example under Valgrind. The keyword arguments are |
| the following: |
| |
| - `env`: environment variables to set, such as `['NAME1=value1', |
| 'NAME2=value2']`, or an [`environment()` |
| object](#environment-object) which allows more sophisticated |
| environment juggling. *(since 0.52.0)* A dictionary is also accepted. |
| - `exe_wrapper`: a list containing the wrapper command or script followed by the arguments to it |
| - `gdb`: if `true`, the tests are also run under `gdb` |
| - `timeout_multiplier`: a number to multiply the test timeout with. |
| *Since 0.57* if timeout_multiplier is `<= 0` the test has infinite duration, |
| in previous versions of Meson the test would fail with a timeout immediately. |
| - `is_default` *(since 0.49.0)*: a bool to set whether this is the default test setup. |
| If `true`, the setup will be used whenever `meson test` is run |
| without the `--setup` option. |
| - `exclude_suites` *(since 0.57.0)*: a list of test suites that should be |
| excluded when using this setup. Suites specified in the `--suite` option |
| to `meson test` will always run, overriding `add_test_setup` if necessary. |
| |
| To use the test setup, run `meson test --setup=*name*` inside the |
| build dir. |
| |
| Note that all these options are also available while running the |
| `meson test` script for running tests instead of `ninja test` or |
| `msbuild RUN_TESTS.vcxproj`, etc depending on the backend. |
| |
| ### alias_target |
| |
| ``` meson |
| runtarget alias_target(target_name, dep1, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.52.0)* |
| |
| This function creates a new top-level target. Like all top-level |
| targets, this integrates with the selected backend. For instance, with |
| you can run it as `meson compile target_name`. This is a dummy target |
| that does not execute any command, but ensures that all dependencies |
| are built. Dependencies can be any build target (e.g. return value of |
| [executable()](#executable), custom_target(), etc) |
| |
| ### assert() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void assert(*condition*, *message*) |
| ``` |
| |
| Abort with an error message if `condition` evaluates to `false`. |
| |
| *(since 0.53.0)* `message` argument is optional and defaults to print the condition |
| statement instead. |
| |
| ### benchmark() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void benchmark(name, executable, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Creates a benchmark item that will be run when the benchmark target is |
| run. The behavior of this function is identical to [`test()`](#test) |
| except for: |
| |
| * benchmark() has no `is_parallel` keyword because benchmarks are not run in parallel |
| * benchmark() does not automatically add the `MALLOC_PERTURB_` environment variable |
| |
| *Note:* Prior to 0.52.0 benchmark would warn that `depends` and |
| `priority` were unsupported, this is incorrect. |
| |
| ### both_libraries() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget = both_libraries(library_name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.46.0)* |
| |
| Builds both a static and shared library with the given sources. |
| Positional and keyword arguments are otherwise the same as for |
| [`library`](#library). Source files will be compiled only once and |
| object files will be reused to build both shared and static libraries, |
| unless `b_staticpic` user option or `pic` argument are set to false in |
| which case sources will be compiled twice. |
| |
| The returned [buildtarget](#build-target-object) always represents the |
| shared library. In addition it supports the following extra methods: |
| |
| - `get_shared_lib()` returns the shared library build target |
| - `get_static_lib()` returns the static library build target |
| |
| ### build_target() |
| |
| Creates a build target whose type can be set dynamically with the |
| `target_type` keyword argument. |
| |
| `target_type` may be set to one of: |
| |
| - `executable` |
| - `shared_library` |
| - `shared_module` |
| - `static_library` |
| - `both_libraries` |
| - `library` |
| - `jar` |
| |
| This declaration: |
| |
| ```meson |
| executable(<arguments and keyword arguments>) |
| ``` |
| |
| is equivalent to this: |
| |
| ```meson |
| build_target(<arguments and keyword arguments>, target_type : 'executable') |
| ``` |
| |
| The object returned by `build_target` and all convenience wrappers for |
| `build_target` such as [`executable`](#executable) and |
| [`library`](#library) has methods that are documented in the [object |
| methods section](#build-target-object) below. |
| |
| ### configuration_data() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| configuration_data_object = configuration_data(...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Creates an empty configuration object. You should add your |
| configuration with [its method calls](#configuration-data-object) and |
| finally use it in a call to `configure_file`. |
| |
| *(since 0.49.0)* Takes an optional dictionary as first argument. If |
| provided, each key/value pair is added into the `configuration_data` |
| as if `set()` method was called for each of them. |
| |
| ### configure_file() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| generated_file = configure_file(...) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function can run in three modes depending on the keyword arguments |
| passed to it. |
| |
| When a [`configuration_data()`](#configuration_data) object is passed |
| to the `configuration:` keyword argument, it takes a template file as |
| the `input:` (optional) and produces the `output:` (required) by |
| substituting values from the configuration data as detailed in [the |
| configuration file documentation](Configuration.md). *(since 0.49.0)* |
| A dictionary can be passed instead of a |
| [`configuration_data()`](#configuration_data) object. |
| |
| When a list of strings is passed to the `command:` keyword argument, |
| it takes any source or configured file as the `input:` and assumes |
| that the `output:` is produced when the specified command is run. |
| |
| *(since 0.47.0)* When the `copy:` keyword argument is set to `true`, |
| this function will copy the file provided in `input:` to a file in the |
| build directory with the name `output:` in the current directory. |
| |
| These are all the supported keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `capture` *(since 0.41.0)*: when this argument is set to true, |
| Meson captures `stdout` of the `command` and writes it to the target |
| file specified as `output`. |
| - `command`: as explained above, if specified, Meson does not create |
| the file itself but rather runs the specified command, which allows |
| you to do fully custom file generation. *(since 0.52.0)* The command can contain |
| file objects and more than one file can be passed to the `input` keyword |
| argument, see [`custom_target()`](#custom_target) for details about string |
| substitutions. |
| - `copy` *(since 0.47.0)*: as explained above, if specified Meson only |
| copies the file from input to output. |
| - `depfile` *(since 0.52.0)*: a dependency file that the command can write listing |
| all the additional files this target depends on. A change |
| in any one of these files triggers a reconfiguration. |
| - `format` *(since 0.46.0)*: the format of defines. It defaults to `meson`, and so substitutes |
| `#mesondefine` statements and variables surrounded by `@` characters, you can also use `cmake` |
| to replace `#cmakedefine` statements and variables with the `${variable}` syntax. Finally you can use |
| `cmake@` in which case substitutions will apply on `#cmakedefine` statements and variables with |
| the `@variable@` syntax. |
| - `input`: the input file name. If it's not specified in configuration |
| mode, all the variables in the `configuration:` object (see above) |
| are written to the `output:` file. |
| - `install` *(since 0.50.0)*: when true, this generated file is installed during |
| the install step, and `install_dir` must be set and not empty. When false, this |
| generated file is not installed regardless of the value of `install_dir`. |
| When omitted it defaults to true when `install_dir` is set and not empty, |
| false otherwise. |
| - `install_dir`: the subdirectory to install the generated file to |
| (e.g. `share/myproject`), if omitted or given the value of empty |
| string, the file is not installed. |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: specify the file mode in symbolic format |
| and optionally the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. |
| - `output`: the output file name. *(since 0.41.0)* may contain |
| `@PLAINNAME@` or `@BASENAME@` substitutions. In configuration mode, |
| the permissions of the input file (if it is specified) are copied to |
| the output file. |
| - `output_format` *(since 0.47.0)*: the format of the output to generate when no input |
| was specified. It defaults to `c`, in which case preprocessor directives |
| will be prefixed with `#`, you can also use `nasm`, in which case the |
| prefix will be `%`. |
| - `encoding` *(since 0.47.0)*: set the file encoding for the input and output file, |
| defaults to utf-8. The supported encodings are those of python3, see |
| [standard-encodings](https://docs.python.org/3/library/codecs.html#standard-encodings). |
| |
| ### custom_target() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| customtarget custom_target(*name*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Create a custom top level build target. The only positional argument |
| is the name of this target and the keyword arguments are the |
| following. |
| |
| - `build_by_default` *(since 0.38.0)*: causes, when set to true, to |
| have this target be built by default. This means it will be built when |
| `meson compile` is called without any arguments. The default value is `false`. |
| *(since 0.50.0)* If `build_by_default` is explicitly set to false, `install` |
| will no longer override it. If `build_by_default` is not set, `install` will |
| still determine its default. |
| - `build_always` **(deprecated)**: if `true` this target is always considered out of |
| date and is rebuilt every time. Equivalent to setting both |
| `build_always_stale` and `build_by_default` to true. |
| - `build_always_stale` *(since 0.47.0)*: if `true` the target is always considered out of date. |
| Useful for things such as build timestamps or revision control tags. |
| The associated command is run even if the outputs are up to date. |
| - `capture`: there are some compilers that can't be told to write |
| their output to a file but instead write it to standard output. When |
| this argument is set to true, Meson captures `stdout` and writes it |
| to the target file. Note that your command argument list may not |
| contain `@OUTPUT@` when capture mode is active. |
| - `console` *(since 0.48.0)*: keyword argument conflicts with `capture`, and is meant |
| for commands that are resource-intensive and take a long time to |
| finish. With the Ninja backend, setting this will add this target |
| to [Ninja's `console` pool](https://ninja-build.org/manual.html#_the_literal_console_literal_pool), |
| which has special properties such as not buffering stdout and |
| serializing all targets in this pool. |
| - `command`: command to run to create outputs from inputs. The command |
| may be strings or the return value of functions that return file-like |
| objects such as [`find_program()`](#find_program), |
| [`executable()`](#executable), [`configure_file()`](#configure_file), |
| [`files()`](#files), [`custom_target()`](#custom_target), etc. |
| Meson will automatically insert the appropriate dependencies on |
| targets and files listed in this keyword argument. |
| Note: always specify commands in array form `['commandname', |
| '-arg1', '-arg2']` rather than as a string `'commandname -arg1 |
| -arg2'` as the latter will *not* work. |
| - `depend_files`: files ([`string`](#string-object), |
| [`files()`](#files), or [`configure_file()`](#configure_file)) that |
| this target depends on but are not listed in the `command` keyword |
| argument. Useful for adding regen dependencies. |
| - `depends`: specifies that this target depends on the specified |
| target(s), even though it does not take any of them as a command |
| line argument. This is meant for cases where you have a tool that |
| e.g. does globbing internally. Usually you should just put the |
| generated sources as inputs and Meson will set up all dependencies |
| automatically. |
| - `depfile`: a dependency file that the command can write listing |
| all the additional files this target depends on, for example a C |
| compiler would list all the header files it included, and a change |
| in any one of these files triggers a recompilation |
| - `input`: list of source files. *(since 0.41.0)* the list is flattened. |
| - `install`: when true, this target is installed during the install step |
| - `install_dir`: directory to install to |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: the file mode and optionally the |
| owner/uid and group/gid |
| - `output`: list of output files |
| - `env` *(since 0.57.0)*: environment variables to set, such as |
| `{'NAME1': 'value1', 'NAME2': 'value2'}` or `['NAME1=value1', 'NAME2=value2']`, |
| or an [`environment()` object](#environment-object) which allows more |
| sophisticated environment juggling. |
| |
| The list of strings passed to the `command` keyword argument accept |
| the following special string substitutions: |
| |
| - `@INPUT@`: the full path to the input passed to `input`. If more than |
| one input is specified, all of them will be substituted as separate |
| arguments only if the command uses `'@INPUT@'` as a |
| standalone-argument. For instance, this would not work: `command : |
| ['cp', './@INPUT@']`, but this would: `command : ['cp', '@INPUT@']`. |
| - `@OUTPUT@`: the full path to the output passed to `output`. If more |
| than one outputs are specified, the behavior is the same as |
| `@INPUT@`. |
| - `@INPUT0@` `@INPUT1@` `...`: the full path to the input with the specified array index in `input` |
| - `@OUTPUT0@` `@OUTPUT1@` `...`: the full path to the output with the specified array index in `output` |
| - `@OUTDIR@`: the full path to the directory where the output(s) must be written |
| - `@DEPFILE@`: the full path to the dependency file passed to `depfile` |
| - `@PLAINNAME@`: the input filename, without a path |
| - `@BASENAME@`: the input filename, with extension removed |
| - `@PRIVATE_DIR@` *(since 0.50.1)*: path to a directory where the custom target must store all its intermediate files. |
| - `@SOURCE_ROOT@`: the path to the root of the source tree. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| - `@BUILD_ROOT@`: the path to the root of the build tree. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| - `@CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR@`: this is the directory where the currently |
| processed meson.build is located in. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| |
| *(since 0.47.0)* The `depfile` keyword argument also accepts the |
| `@BASENAME@` and `@PLAINNAME@` substitutions. |
| |
| The returned object also has methods that are documented in the |
| [object methods section](#custom-target-object) below. |
| |
| **Note:** Assuming that `command:` is executed by a POSIX `sh` shell |
| is not portable, notably to Windows. Instead, consider using a |
| `native: true` [executable()](#executable), or a python script. |
| |
| ### declare_dependency() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| dependency_object declare_dependency(...) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function returns a [dependency object](#dependency-object) that |
| behaves like the return value of [`dependency`](#dependency) but is |
| internal to the current build. The main use case for this is in |
| subprojects. This allows a subproject to easily specify how it should |
| be used. This makes it interchangeable with the same dependency that |
| is provided externally by the system. This function has the following |
| keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `compile_args`: compile arguments to use. |
| - `dependencies`: other dependencies needed to use this dependency. |
| - `include_directories`: the directories to add to header search path, |
| must be include_directories objects or *(since 0.50.0)* plain strings |
| - `link_args`: link arguments to use. |
| - `link_with`: libraries to link against. |
| - `link_whole` *(since 0.46.0)*: libraries to link fully, same as [`executable`](#executable). |
| - `sources`: sources to add to targets (or generated header files |
| that should be built before sources including them are built) |
| - `version`: the version of this dependency, such as `1.2.3`. Defaults to the |
| project version. |
| - `variables` *(since 0.54.0)*: a dictionary of arbitrary strings, this is meant to be used |
| in subprojects where special variables would be provided via cmake or |
| pkg-config. *since 0.56.0* it can also be a list of `'key=value'` strings. |
| |
| ### dependency() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| dependency_object dependency(*dependency_name*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Finds an external dependency (usually a library installed on your |
| system) with the given name with `pkg-config` and [with |
| CMake](Dependencies.md#cmake) if `pkg-config` fails. Additionally, |
| frameworks (OSX only) and [library-specific fallback detection |
| logic](Dependencies.md#dependencies-with-custom-lookup-functionality) |
| are also supported. |
| |
| Dependencies can also be resolved in two other ways: |
| |
| * if the same name was used in a `meson.override_dependency` prior to |
| the call to `dependency`, the overriding dependency will be returned |
| unconditionally; that is, the overriding dependency will be used |
| independent of whether an external dependency is installed in the system. |
| Typically, `meson.override_dependency` will have been used by a |
| subproject. |
| |
| * by a fallback subproject which, if needed, will be brought into the current |
| build specification as if [`subproject()`](#subproject) had been called. |
| The subproject can be specified with the `fallback` argument. Alternatively, |
| if the `fallback` argument is absent, *since 0.55.0* Meson can |
| automatically identify a subproject as a fallback if a wrap file |
| [provides](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md#provide-section) the |
| dependency, or if a subproject has the same name as the dependency. |
| In the latter case, the subproject must use `meson.override_dependency` to |
| specify the replacement, or Meson will report a hard error. See the |
| [Wrap documentation](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md#provide-section) |
| for more details. This automatic search can be controlled using the |
| `allow_fallback` keyword argument. |
| |
| This function supports the following keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `default_options` *(since 0.37.0)*: an array of default option values |
| that override those set in the subproject's `meson_options.txt` |
| (like `default_options` in [`project()`](#project), they only have |
| effect when Meson is run for the first time, and command line |
| arguments override any default options in build files) |
| - `allow_fallback` (boolean argument, *since 0.56.0*): specifies whether Meson |
| should automatically pick a fallback subproject in case the dependency |
| is not found in the system. If `true` and the dependency is not found |
| on the system, Meson will fallback to a subproject that provides this |
| dependency. If `false`, Meson will not fallback even if a subproject |
| provides this dependency. By default, Meson will do so if `required` |
| is `true` or [`enabled`](Build-options.md#features); see the [Wrap |
| documentation](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md#provide-section) |
| for more details. |
| - `fallback` (string or array argument): manually specifies a subproject |
| fallback to use in case the dependency is not found in the system. |
| This is useful if the automatic search is not applicable or if you |
| want to support versions of Meson older than 0.55.0. If the value is an |
| array `['subproj_name', 'subproj_dep']`, the first value is the name |
| of the subproject and the second is the variable name in that |
| subproject that contains a dependency object such as the return |
| value of [`declare_dependency`](#declare_dependency) or |
| [`dependency()`](#dependency), etc. Note that this means the |
| fallback dependency may be a not-found dependency, in which |
| case the value of the `required:` kwarg will be obeyed. |
| *Since 0.54.0* the value can be a single string, the subproject name; |
| in this case the subproject must use |
| `meson.override_dependency('dependency_name', subproj_dep)` |
| to specify the dependency object used in the superproject. |
| - `language` *(since 0.42.0)*: defines what language-specific |
| dependency to find if it's available for multiple languages. |
| - `method`: defines the way the dependency is detected, the default is |
| `auto` but can be overridden to be e.g. `qmake` for Qt development, |
| and [different dependencies support different values]( |
| Dependencies.md#dependencies-with-custom-lookup-functionality) |
| for this (though `auto` will work on all of them) |
| - `native`: if set to `true`, causes Meson to find the dependency on |
| the build machine system rather than the host system (i.e. where the |
| cross compiled binary will run on), usually only needed if you build |
| a tool to be used during compilation. |
| - `not_found_message` *(since 0.50.0)*: an optional string that will |
| be printed as a `message()` if the dependency was not found. |
| - `required`: when set to false, Meson will proceed with the build |
| even if the dependency is not found. *(since 0.47.0)* The value of a |
| [`feature`](Build-options.md#features) option can also be passed. |
| - `static`: tells the dependency provider to try to get static |
| libraries instead of dynamic ones (note that this is not supported |
| by all dependency backends) |
| - `version` *(since 0.37.0)*: specifies the required version, a string containing a |
| comparison operator followed by the version string, examples include |
| `>1.0.0`, `<=2.3.5` or `3.1.4` for exact matching. |
| You can also specify multiple restrictions by passing a list to this |
| keyword argument, such as: `['>=3.14.0', '<=4.1.0']`. |
| These requirements are never met if the version is unknown. |
| - `include_type` *(since 0.52.0)*: an enum flag, marking how the dependency |
| flags should be converted. Supported values are `'preserve'`, `'system'` and |
| `'non-system'`. System dependencies may be handled differently on some |
| platforms, for instance, using `-isystem` instead of `-I`, where possible. |
| If `include_type` is set to `'preserve'`, no additional conversion will be |
| performed. The default value is `'preserve'`. |
| - other |
| [library-specific](Dependencies.md#dependencies-with-custom-lookup-functionality) |
| keywords may also be accepted (e.g. `modules` specifies submodules to use for |
| dependencies such as Qt5 or Boost. `components` allows the user to manually |
| add CMake `COMPONENTS` for the `find_package` lookup) |
| - `disabler` *(since 0.49.0)*: if `true` and the dependency couldn't be found, |
| returns a [disabler object](#disabler-object) instead of a not-found dependency. |
| |
| If dependency_name is `''`, the dependency is always not found. So |
| with `required: false`, this always returns a dependency object for |
| which the `found()` method returns `false`, and which can be passed |
| like any other dependency to the `dependencies:` keyword argument of a |
| `build_target`. This can be used to implement a dependency which is |
| sometimes not required e.g. in some branches of a conditional, or with |
| a `fallback:` kwarg, can be used to declare an optional dependency |
| that only looks in the specified subproject, and only if that's |
| allowed by `--wrap-mode`. |
| |
| The returned object also has methods that are documented in the |
| [object methods section](#dependency-object) below. |
| |
| ### disabler() |
| |
| *(since 0.44.0)* |
| |
| Returns a [disabler object](#disabler-object). |
| |
| ### error() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void error(message) |
| ``` |
| |
| Print the argument string and halts the build process. |
| |
| *(since 0.58.0)* Can take more than one argument that will be separated by |
| space. |
| |
| ### environment() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| environment_object environment(...) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.35.0)* |
| |
| Returns an empty [environment variable object](#environment-object). |
| |
| *(since 0.52.0)* Takes an optional dictionary as first argument. If |
| provided, each key/value pair is added into the `environment_object` |
| as if `set()` method was called for each of them. |
| |
| ### executable() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget executable(*exe_name*, *sources*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Creates a new executable. The first argument specifies its name and |
| the remaining positional arguments define the input files to use. They |
| can be of the following types: |
| |
| - Strings relative to the current source directory |
| - [`files()`](#files) objects defined in any preceding build file |
| - The return value of configure-time generators such as [`configure_file()`](#configure_file) |
| - The return value of build-time generators such as |
| [`custom_target()`](#custom_target) or |
| [`generator.process()`](#generator-object) |
| |
| These input files can be sources, objects, libraries, or any other |
| file. Meson will automatically categorize them based on the extension |
| and use them accordingly. For instance, sources (`.c`, `.cpp`, |
| `.vala`, `.rs`, etc) will be compiled and objects (`.o`, `.obj`) and |
| libraries (`.so`, `.dll`, etc) will be linked. |
| |
| With the Ninja backend, Meson will create a build-time [order-only |
| dependency](https://ninja-build.org/manual.html#ref_dependencies) on |
| all generated input files, including unknown files. This is needed to |
| bootstrap the generation of the real dependencies in the |
| [depfile](https://ninja-build.org/manual.html#ref_headers) generated |
| by your compiler to determine when to rebuild sources. Ninja relies on |
| this dependency file for all input files, generated and non-generated. |
| The behavior is similar for other backends. |
| |
| Executable supports the following keyword arguments. Note that just |
| like the positional arguments above, these keyword arguments can also |
| be passed to [shared and static libraries](#library). |
| |
| - `<languagename>_pch`: precompiled header file to use for the given language |
| - `<languagename>_args`: compiler flags to use for the given language; |
| eg: `cpp_args` for C++ |
| - `build_by_default` *(since 0.38.0)*: causes, when set to true, to |
| have this target be built by default. This means it will be built when |
| `meson compile` is called without any arguments. The default value is |
| `true` for all built target types. |
| - `build_rpath`: a string to add to target's rpath definition in the |
| build dir, but which will be removed on install |
| - `dependencies`: one or more objects created with |
| [`dependency`](#dependency) or [`find_library`](#compiler-object) |
| (for external deps) or [`declare_dependency`](#declare_dependency) |
| (for deps built by the project) |
| - `extra_files`: not used for the build itself but are shown as |
| source files in IDEs that group files by targets (such as Visual |
| Studio) |
| - `gui_app`: when set to true flags this target as a GUI application |
| on platforms where this makes a differerence, **deprecated** since |
| 0.56.0, use `win_subsystem` instead. |
| - `link_args`: flags to use during linking. You can use UNIX-style |
| flags here for all platforms. |
| - `link_depends`: strings, files, or custom targets the link step |
| depends on such as a symbol visibility map. The purpose is to |
| automatically trigger a re-link (but not a re-compile) of the target |
| when this file changes. |
| - `link_language` *(since 0.51.0)* *(broken until 0.55.0)*: makes the linker for this |
| target be for the specified language. It is generally unnecessary to set |
| this, as Meson will detect the right linker to use in most cases. There are |
| only two cases where this is needed. One, your main function in an |
| executable is not in the language Meson picked, or second you want to force |
| a library to use only one ABI. |
| - `link_whole` *(since 0.40.0)*: links all contents of the given static libraries |
| whether they are used by not, equivalent to the `-Wl,--whole-archive` argument flag of GCC. |
| *(since 0.41.0)* If passed a list that list will be flattened. |
| *(since 0.51.0)* This argument also accepts outputs produced by |
| custom targets. The user must ensure that the output is a library in |
| the correct format. |
| - `link_with`: one or more shared or static libraries (built by this |
| project) that this target should be linked with. *(since 0.41.0)* If passed a |
| list this list will be flattened. *(since 0.51.0)* The arguments can also be custom targets. |
| In this case Meson will assume that merely adding the output file in the linker command |
| line is sufficient to make linking work. If this is not sufficient, |
| then the build system writer must write all other steps manually. |
| - `export_dynamic` *(since 0.45.0)*: when set to true causes the target's symbols to be |
| dynamically exported, allowing modules built using the |
| [`shared_module`](#shared_module) function to refer to functions, |
| variables and other symbols defined in the executable itself. Implies |
| the `implib` argument. |
| - `implib` *(since 0.42.0)*: when set to true, an import library is generated for the |
| executable (the name of the import library is based on *exe_name*). |
| Alternatively, when set to a string, that gives the base name for |
| the import library. The import library is used when the returned |
| build target object appears in `link_with:` elsewhere. Only has any |
| effect on platforms where that is meaningful (e.g. Windows). Implies |
| the `export_dynamic` argument. |
| - `implicit_include_directories` *(since 0.42.0)*: a boolean telling whether Meson |
| adds the current source and build directories to the include path, |
| defaults to `true`. |
| - `include_directories`: one or more objects created with the |
| `include_directories` function, or *(since 0.50.0)* strings, which |
| will be transparently expanded to include directory objects |
| - `install`: when set to true, this executable should be installed, defaults to `false` |
| - `install_dir`: override install directory for this file. The value is |
| relative to the `prefix` specified. F.ex, if you want to install |
| plugins into a subdir, you'd use something like this: `install_dir : |
| get_option('libdir') / 'projectname-1.0'`. |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: specify the file mode in symbolic format |
| and optionally the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. |
| - `install_rpath`: a string to set the target's rpath to after install |
| (but *not* before that). On Windows, this argument has no effect. |
| - `objects`: list of prebuilt object files (usually for third party |
| products you don't have source to) that should be linked in this |
| target, **never** use this for object files that you build yourself. |
| - `name_suffix`: the string that will be used as the extension for the |
| target by overriding the default. By default on Windows this is |
| `exe` and on other platforms it is omitted. Set this to `[]`, or omit |
| the keyword argument for the default behaviour. |
| - `override_options` *(since 0.40.0)*: takes an array of strings in the same format as |
| `project`'s `default_options` overriding the values of these options |
| for this target only. |
| - `gnu_symbol_visibility` *(since 0.48.0)*: specifies how symbols should be exported, see |
| e.g [the GCC Wiki](https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility) for more |
| information. This value can either be an empty string or one of |
| `default`, `internal`, `hidden`, `protected` or `inlineshidden`, which |
| is the same as `hidden` but also includes things like C++ implicit |
| constructors as specified in the GCC manual. Ignored on compilers that |
| do not support GNU visibility arguments. |
| - `d_import_dirs`: list of directories to look in for string imports used |
| in the D programming language |
| - `d_unittest`: when set to true, the D modules are compiled in debug mode |
| - `d_module_versions`: list of module version identifiers set when compiling D sources |
| - `d_debug`: list of module debug identifiers set when compiling D sources |
| - `pie` *(since 0.49.0)*: build a position-independent executable |
| - `native`: is a boolean controlling whether the target is compiled for the |
| build or host machines. Defaults to false, building for the host machine. |
| - `win_subsystem` *(since 0.56.0)* specifies the subsystem type to use |
| on the Windows platform. Typical values include `console` for text |
| mode programs and `windows` for gui apps. The value can also contain |
| version specification such as `windows,6.0`. See [MSDN |
| documentation](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/subsystem-specify-subsystem) |
| for the full list. The default value is `console`. |
| |
| The list of `sources`, `objects`, and `dependencies` is always |
| flattened, which means you can freely nest and add lists while |
| creating the final list. |
| |
| The returned object also has methods that are documented in the |
| [object methods section](#build-target-object) below. |
| |
| ### find_library() |
| |
| *(since 0.31.0)* **(deprecated)** Use `find_library()` method of |
| [the compiler object](#compiler-object) as obtained from |
| `meson.get_compiler(lang)`. |
| |
| ### find_program() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| program find_program(program_name1, program_name2, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| `program_name1` here is a string that can be an executable or script |
| to be searched for in `PATH` or other places inside the project. |
| The search order is: |
| |
| 1. Program overrides set via [`meson.override_find_program()`](Reference-manual.md#meson-object) |
| 1. [`[provide]` sections](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md#provide-section) |
| in subproject wrap files, if [`wrap_mode`](Builtin-options.md#core-options) is |
| set to `forcefallback` |
| 1. [`[binaries]` section](Machine-files.md#binaries) in your machine files |
| 1. Directories provided using the `dirs:` kwarg (see below) |
| 1. Project's source tree relative to the current subdir |
| - If you use the return value of [`configure_file()`](#configure_file), the |
| current subdir inside the build tree is used instead |
| 1. `PATH` environment variable |
| 1. [`[provide]` sections](Wrap-dependency-system-manual.md#provide-section) in |
| subproject wrap files, if [`wrap_mode`](Builtin-options.md#core-options) is |
| set to anything other than `nofallback` |
| |
| *(since 0.37.0)* `program_name2` and later positional arguments are used as fallback |
| strings to search for. This is meant to be used for cases where the |
| program may have many alternative names, such as `foo` and |
| `foo.py`. The function will check for the arguments one by one and the |
| first one that is found is returned. |
| |
| Keyword arguments are the following: |
| |
| - `required` By default, `required` is set to `true` and Meson will |
| abort if no program can be found. If `required` is set to `false`, |
| Meson continue even if none of the programs can be found. You can |
| then use the `.found()` method on the [returned object](#external-program-object) to check |
| whether it was found or not. *(since 0.47.0)* The value of a |
| [`feature`](Build-options.md#features) option can also be passed to the |
| `required` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `native` *(since 0.43.0)*: defines how this executable should be searched. By default |
| it is set to `false`, which causes Meson to first look for the |
| executable in the cross file (when cross building) and if it is not |
| defined there, then from the system. If set to `true`, the cross |
| file is ignored and the program is only searched from the system. |
| |
| - `disabler` *(since 0.49.0)*: if `true` and the program couldn't be found, return a |
| [disabler object](#disabler-object) instead of a not-found object. |
| |
| |
| - `version` *(since 0.52.0)*: specifies the required version, see |
| [`dependency()`](#dependency) for argument format. The version of the program |
| is determined by running `program_name --version` command. If stdout is empty |
| it fallbacks to stderr. If the output contains more text than simply a version |
| number, only the first occurrence of numbers separated by dots is kept. |
| If the output is more complicated than that, the version checking will have to |
| be done manually using [`run_command()`](#run_command). |
| |
| - `dirs` *(since 0.53.0)*: extra list of absolute paths where to look for program |
| names. |
| |
| Meson will also autodetect scripts with a shebang line and run them |
| with the executable/interpreter specified in it both on Windows |
| (because the command invocator will reject the command otherwise) and |
| Unixes (if the script file does not have the executable bit set). |
| Hence, you *must not* manually add the interpreter while using this |
| script as part of a list of commands. |
| |
| If you need to check for a program in a non-standard location, you can |
| just pass an absolute path to `find_program`, e.g. |
| |
| ```meson |
| setcap = find_program('setcap', '/usr/sbin/setcap', '/sbin/setcap', required : false) |
| ``` |
| |
| It is also possible to pass an array to `find_program` in case you |
| need to construct the set of paths to search on the fly: |
| |
| ```meson |
| setcap = find_program(['setcap', '/usr/sbin/setcap', '/sbin/setcap'], required : false) |
| ``` |
| |
| The returned object also has methods that are documented in the |
| [object methods section](#external-program-object) below. |
| |
| ### files() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| file_array files(list_of_filenames) |
| ``` |
| |
| This command takes the strings given to it in arguments and returns |
| corresponding File objects that you can use as sources for build |
| targets. The difference is that file objects remember the subdirectory |
| they were defined in and can be used anywhere in the source tree. As |
| an example suppose you have source file `foo.cpp` in subdirectory |
| `bar1` and you would like to use it in a build target that is defined |
| in `bar2`. To make this happen you first create the object in `bar1` |
| like this: |
| |
| ```meson |
| foofile = files('foo.cpp') |
| ``` |
| |
| Then you can use it in `bar2` like this: |
| |
| ```meson |
| executable('myprog', 'myprog.cpp', foofile, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Meson will then do the right thing. |
| |
| ### generator() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| generator_object generator(*executable*, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| See also: [`custom_target`](#custom_target) |
| |
| This function creates a [generator object](#generator-object) that can |
| be used to run custom compilation commands. The only positional |
| argument is the executable to use. It can either be a self-built |
| executable or one returned by find_program. Keyword arguments are the |
| following: |
| |
| - `arguments`: a list of template strings that will be the command line |
| arguments passed to the executable |
| - `depends` *(since 0.51.0)*: is an array of build targets that must be built before this |
| generator can be run. This is used if you have a generator that calls |
| a second executable that is built in this project. |
| - `depfile`: is a template string pointing to a dependency file that a |
| generator can write listing all the additional files this target |
| depends on, for example a C compiler would list all the header files |
| it included, and a change in any one of these files triggers a |
| recompilation |
| - `output`: a template string (or list of template strings) defining |
| how an output file name is (or multiple output names are) generated |
| from a single source file name |
| - `capture` *(since 0.43.0)*: when this argument is set to true, Meson |
| captures `stdout` of the `executable` and writes it to the target file |
| specified as `output`. |
| |
| The returned object also has methods that are documented in the |
| [object methods section](#generator-object) below. |
| |
| The template strings passed to all the above keyword arguments accept |
| the following special substitutions: |
| |
| - `@PLAINNAME@`: the complete input file name, e.g: `foo.c` becomes `foo.c` (unchanged) |
| - `@BASENAME@`: the base of the input filename, e.g.: `foo.c.y` becomes `foo.c` (extension is removed) |
| |
| Each string passed to the `output` keyword argument *must* be |
| constructed using one or both of these two substitutions. |
| |
| In addition to the above substitutions, the `arguments` keyword |
| argument also accepts the following: |
| |
| - `@OUTPUT@`: the full path to the output file |
| - `@INPUT@`: the full path to the input file |
| - `@DEPFILE@`: the full path to the depfile |
| - `@SOURCE_DIR@`: the full path to the root of the source tree |
| - `@CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR@`: this is the directory where the currently processed meson.build is located in |
| - `@BUILD_DIR@`: the full path to the root of the build dir where the output will be placed |
| |
| NOTE: Generators should only be used for outputs that will ***only*** |
| be used as inputs for a [build target](#build_target) or a [custom |
| target](#custom_target). When you use the processed output of a |
| generator in multiple targets, the generator will be run multiple |
| times to create outputs for each target. Each output will be created |
| in a target-private directory `@BUILD_DIR@`. |
| |
| If you want to generate files for general purposes such as for |
| generating headers to be used by several sources, or data that will be |
| installed, and so on, use a [`custom_target`](#custom_target) instead. |
| |
| ### get_option() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| value get_option(option_name) |
| ``` |
| |
| Obtains the value of the [project build option](Build-options.md) |
| specified in the positional argument. |
| |
| Note that the value returned for built-in options that end in `dir` |
| such as `bindir` and `libdir` is always a path relative to (and |
| inside) the `prefix`. |
| |
| The only exceptions are: `sysconfdir`, `localstatedir`, and |
| `sharedstatedir` which will return the value passed during |
| configuration as-is, which may be absolute, or relative to `prefix`. |
| [`install_dir` arguments](Installing.md) handles that as expected, but |
| if you need the absolute path to one of these e.g. to use in a define |
| etc., you should use `get_option('prefix') / |
| get_option('localstatedir')` |
| |
| For options of type `feature` a |
| [feature option object](#feature-option-object) |
| is returned instead of a string. |
| See [`feature` options](Build-options.md#features) |
| documentation for more details. |
| |
| ### get_variable() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| value get_variable(variable_name, fallback) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function can be used to dynamically obtain a variable. `res = |
| get_variable(varname, fallback)` takes the value of `varname` (which |
| must be a string) and stores the variable of that name into `res`. If |
| the variable does not exist, the variable `fallback` is stored to |
| `res`instead. If a fallback is not specified, then attempting to read |
| a non-existing variable will cause a fatal error. |
| |
| ### import() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| module_object import(module_name) |
| ``` |
| |
| Imports the given extension module. Returns an opaque object that can |
| be used to call the methods of the module. Here's an example for a |
| hypothetical `testmod` module. |
| |
| ```meson |
| tmod = import('testmod') |
| tmod.do_something() |
| ``` |
| |
| ### include_directories() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| include_object include_directories(directory_names, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Returns an opaque object which contains the directories (relative to |
| the current directory) given in the positional arguments. The result |
| can then be passed to the `include_directories:` keyword argument when |
| building executables or libraries. You can use the returned object in |
| any subdirectory you want, Meson will make the paths work |
| automatically. |
| |
| Note that this function call itself does not add the directories into |
| the search path, since there is no global search path. For something |
| like that, see [`add_project_arguments()`](#add_project_arguments). |
| |
| See also `implicit_include_directories` parameter of |
| [executable()](#executable), which adds current source and build |
| directories to include path. |
| |
| Each directory given is converted to two include paths: one that is |
| relative to the source root and one relative to the build root. |
| |
| For example, with the following source tree layout in |
| `/home/user/project.git`: |
| |
| `meson.build`: |
| ```meson |
| project(...) |
| |
| subdir('include') |
| subdir('src') |
| |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| `include/meson.build`: |
| ```meson |
| inc = include_directories('.') |
| |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| `src/meson.build`: |
| ```meson |
| sources = [...] |
| |
| executable('some-tool', sources, |
| include_directories : inc, |
| ...) |
| |
| ... |
| ``` |
| |
| If the build tree is `/tmp/build-tree`, the following include paths |
| will be added to the `executable()` call: `-I/tmp/build-tree/include |
| -I/home/user/project.git/include`. |
| |
| This function has one keyword argument `is_system` which, if set, |
| flags the specified directories as system directories. This means that |
| they will be used with the `-isystem` compiler argument rather than |
| `-I` on compilers that support this flag (in practice everything |
| except Visual Studio). |
| |
| ### install_data() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void install_data(list_of_files, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Installs files from the source tree that are listed as positional |
| arguments. The following keyword arguments are supported: |
| |
| - `install_dir`: the absolute or relative path to the installation |
| directory. If this is a relative path, it is assumed to be relative |
| to the prefix. |
| |
| If omitted, the directory defaults to `{datadir}/{projectname}` *(since 0.45.0)*. |
| |
| - `install_mode`: specify the file mode in symbolic format and |
| optionally the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. For |
| example: |
| |
| `install_mode: 'rw-r--r--'` for just the file mode |
| |
| `install_mode: ['rw-r--r--', 'nobody', 'nogroup']` for the file mode and the user/group |
| |
| `install_mode: ['rw-r-----', 0, 0]` for the file mode and uid/gid |
| |
| To leave any of these three as the default, specify `false`. |
| |
| - `rename` *(since 0.46.0)*: if specified renames each source file into corresponding |
| file from `rename` list. Nested paths are allowed and they are |
| joined with `install_dir`. Length of `rename` list must be equal to |
| the number of sources. |
| |
| See [Installing](Installing.md) for more examples. |
| |
| ### install_headers() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void install_headers(list_of_headers, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Installs the specified header files from the source tree into the |
| system header directory (usually `/{prefix}/include`) during the |
| install step. This directory can be overridden by specifying it with |
| the `install_dir` keyword argument. If you just want to install into a |
| subdirectory of the system header directory, then use the `subdir` |
| argument. As an example if this has the value `myproj` then the |
| headers would be installed to `/{prefix}/include/myproj`. |
| |
| For example, this will install `common.h` and `kola.h` into |
| `/{prefix}/include`: |
| |
| ```meson |
| install_headers('common.h', 'proj/kola.h') |
| ``` |
| |
| This will install `common.h` and `kola.h` into `/{prefix}/include/myproj`: |
| |
| ```meson |
| install_headers('common.h', 'proj/kola.h', subdir : 'myproj') |
| ``` |
| |
| This will install `common.h` and `kola.h` into `/{prefix}/cust/myproj`: |
| |
| ```meson |
| install_headers('common.h', 'proj/kola.h', install_dir : 'cust', subdir : 'myproj') |
| ``` |
| |
| Accepts the following keywords: |
| |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: can be used to specify the file mode in symbolic |
| format and optionally the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. |
| An example value could be `['rwxr-sr-x', 'root', 'root']`. |
| |
| ### install_man() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void install_man(list_of_manpages, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Installs the specified man files from the source tree into system's |
| man directory during the install step. This directory can be |
| overridden by specifying it with the `install_dir` keyword argument. |
| |
| Accepts the following keywords: |
| |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: can be used to specify the file mode in symbolic |
| format and optionally the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. |
| An example value could be `['rwxr-sr-x', 'root', 'root']`. |
| |
| - `locale` *(since 0.58.0)*: can be used to specify the locale into which the |
| man page will be installed within the manual page directory tree. |
| An example manual might be `foo.fr.1` with a locale of `fr`, such |
| that `{mandir}/{locale}/man{num}/foo.1` becomes the installed file. |
| |
| *(since 0.49.0)* [manpages are no longer compressed |
| implicitly][install_man_49]. |
| |
| [install_man_49]: |
| https://mesonbuild.com/Release-notes-for-0-49-0.html#manpages-are-no-longer-compressed-implicitly |
| |
| ### install_subdir() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void install_subdir(subdir_name, |
| install_dir : ..., |
| exclude_files : ..., |
| exclude_directories : ..., |
| strip_directory : ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Installs the entire given subdirectory and its contents from the |
| source tree to the location specified by the keyword argument |
| `install_dir`. |
| |
| If the subdirectory does not exist in the source tree, an empty directory is |
| created in the specified location. *(since 0.45.0)* A newly created |
| subdirectory may only be created in the keyword argument `install_dir`. |
| |
| The following keyword arguments are supported: |
| |
| - `exclude_files`: a list of file names that should not be installed. |
| Names are interpreted as paths relative to the `subdir_name` location. |
| - `exclude_directories`: a list of directory names that should not be installed. |
| Names are interpreted as paths relative to the `subdir_name` location. |
| - `install_dir`: the location to place the installed subdirectory. |
| - `install_mode` *(since 0.47.0)*: the file mode in symbolic format and optionally |
| the owner/uid and group/gid for the installed files. |
| - `strip_directory` *(since 0.45.0)*: install directory contents. `strip_directory=false` by default. |
| If `strip_directory=true` only the last component of the source path is used. |
| |
| For a given directory `foo`: |
| ```text |
| foo/ |
| bar/ |
| file1 |
| file2 |
| ``` |
| `install_subdir('foo', install_dir : 'share', strip_directory : false)` creates |
| ```text |
| share/ |
| foo/ |
| bar/ |
| file1 |
| file2 |
| ``` |
| |
| `install_subdir('foo', install_dir : 'share', strip_directory : true)` creates |
| ```text |
| share/ |
| bar/ |
| file1 |
| file2 |
| ``` |
| |
| `install_subdir('foo/bar', install_dir : 'share', strip_directory : false)` creates |
| ```text |
| share/ |
| bar/ |
| file1 |
| ``` |
| |
| `install_subdir('foo/bar', install_dir : 'share', strip_directory : true)` creates |
| ```text |
| share/ |
| file1 |
| ``` |
| |
| `install_subdir('new_directory', install_dir : 'share')` creates |
| ```text |
| share/ |
| new_directory/ |
| ``` |
| |
| ### is_disabler() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| bool is_disabler(var) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.52.0)* |
| |
| Returns true if a variable is a disabler and false otherwise. |
| |
| ### is_variable() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| bool is_variable(varname) |
| ``` |
| |
| Returns true if a variable of the given name exists and false otherwise. |
| |
| ### jar() |
| |
| ```meson |
| jar_object jar(name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Build a jar from the specified Java source files. Keyword arguments |
| are the same as [`executable`](#executable)'s, with the addition of |
| `main_class` which specifies the main class to execute when running |
| the jar with `java -jar file.jar`. |
| |
| ### join_paths() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| string join_paths(string1, string2, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.36.0)* |
| |
| Joins the given strings into a file system path segment. For example |
| `join_paths('foo', 'bar')` results in `foo/bar`. If any one of the |
| individual segments is an absolute path, all segments before it are |
| dropped. That means that `join_paths('foo', '/bar')` returns `/bar`. |
| |
| **Warning** Don't use `join_paths()` for sources in [`library`](#library) and |
| [`executable`](#executable), you should use [`files`](#files) instead. |
| |
| *(since 0.49.0)* Using the`/` operator on strings is equivalent to calling |
| `join_paths`. |
| |
| ```meson |
| # res1 and res2 will have identical values |
| res1 = join_paths(foo, bar) |
| res2 = foo / bar |
| ``` |
| |
| ### library() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget library(library_name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Builds a library that is either static, shared or both depending on |
| the value of `default_library` |
| user [option](https://mesonbuild.com/Builtin-options.html). |
| You should use this instead of [`shared_library`](#shared_library), |
| [`static_library`](#static_library) or |
| [`both_libraries`](#both_libraries) most of the time. This allows you |
| to toggle your entire project (including subprojects) from shared to |
| static with only one option. This option applies to libraries being |
| built internal to the entire project. For external dependencies, the |
| default library type preferred is shared. This can be adapted on a per |
| library basis using the [dependency()](#dependency)) `static` keyword. |
| |
| The keyword arguments for this are the same as for |
| [`executable`](#executable) with the following additions: |
| |
| - `name_prefix`: the string that will be used as the prefix for the |
| target output filename by overriding the default (only used for |
| libraries). By default this is `lib` on all platforms and compilers, |
| except for MSVC shared libraries where it is omitted to follow |
| convention, and Cygwin shared libraries where it is `cyg`. |
| - `name_suffix`: the string that will be used as the suffix for the |
| target output filename by overriding the default (see also: |
| [executable()](#executable)). By default, for shared libraries this |
| is `dylib` on macOS, `dll` on Windows, and `so` everywhere else. |
| For static libraries, it is `a` everywhere. By convention MSVC |
| static libraries use the `lib` suffix, but we use `a` to avoid a |
| potential name clash with shared libraries which also generate |
| import libraries with a `lib` suffix. |
| - `rust_crate_type`: specifies the crate type for Rust |
| libraries. Defaults to `dylib` for shared libraries and `rlib` for |
| static libraries. |
| |
| `static_library`, `shared_library` and `both_libraries` also accept |
| these keyword arguments. |
| |
| Note: You can set `name_prefix` and `name_suffix` to `[]`, or omit |
| them for the default behaviour for each platform. |
| |
| ### message() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void message(text) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function prints its argument to stdout. |
| |
| *(since 0.54.0)* Can take more than one argument that will be |
| separated by space. |
| |
| ### warning() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void warning(text) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.44.0)* |
| |
| This function prints its argument to stdout prefixed with WARNING:. |
| |
| *(since 0.54.0)* Can take more than one argument that will be separated by |
| space. |
| |
| ### summary() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void summary(key, value) |
| void summary(dictionary) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.53.0)* |
| |
| This function is used to summarize build configuration at the end of the build |
| process. This function provides a way for projects (and subprojects) to report |
| this information in a clear way. |
| |
| The content is a series of key/value pairs grouped into sections. If |
| the section keyword argument is omitted, those key/value pairs are |
| implicitly grouped into a section with no title. key/value pairs can |
| optionally be grouped into a dictionary, but keep in mind that |
| dictionaries does not guarantee ordering. `key` must be string, |
| `value` can be: |
| |
| - an integer, boolean or string |
| - *since 0.57.0* an external program or a dependency |
| - *since 0.58.0* a feature option |
| - a list of those. |
| |
| `summary()` can be called multiple times as long as the same |
| section/key pair doesn't appear twice. All sections will be collected |
| and printed at the end of the configuration in the same order as they |
| have been called. |
| |
| Keyword arguments: |
| - `section`: title to group a set of key/value pairs. |
| - `bool_yn`: if set to true, all boolean values will be replaced by green YES |
| or red NO. |
| - `list_sep` *(since 0.54.0)*: string used to separate list values (e.g. `', '`). |
| |
| Example: |
| ```meson |
| project('My Project', version : '1.0') |
| summary({'bindir': get_option('bindir'), |
| 'libdir': get_option('libdir'), |
| 'datadir': get_option('datadir'), |
| }, section: 'Directories') |
| summary({'Some boolean': false, |
| 'Another boolean': true, |
| 'Some string': 'Hello World', |
| 'A list': ['string', 1, true], |
| }, section: 'Configuration') |
| ``` |
| |
| Output: |
| ``` |
| My Project 1.0 |
| |
| Directories |
| prefix : /opt/gnome |
| bindir : bin |
| libdir : lib/x86_64-linux-gnu |
| datadir : share |
| |
| Configuration |
| Some boolean : False |
| Another boolean: True |
| Some string : Hello World |
| A list : string |
| 1 |
| True |
| ``` |
| |
| ### project() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void project(project_name, list_of_languages, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| The first argument to this function must be a string defining the name |
| of this project. |
| |
| The project name can be any string you want, it's not used for |
| anything except descriptive purposes. However since it is written to |
| e.g. the dependency manifest is usually makes sense to have it be the |
| same as the project tarball or pkg-config name. So for example you |
| would probably want to use the name _libfoobar_ instead of _The Foobar |
| Library_. |
| |
| It may be followed by the list of programming languages that the project uses. |
| |
| *(since 0.40.0)* The list of languages is optional. |
| |
| These languages may be used both for `native: false` (the default) |
| (host machine) targets and for `native: true` (build machine) targets. |
| *(since 0.56.0)* The build machine compilers for the specified |
| languages are not required. |
| |
| Supported values for languages are `c`, `cpp` (for `C++`), `cuda`, `d`, |
| `objc`, `objcpp`, `fortran`, `java`, `cs` (for `C#`), `vala` and `rust`. |
| |
| Project supports the following keyword arguments. |
| |
| - `default_options`: takes an array of strings. The strings are in the |
| form `key=value` and have the same format as options to |
| `meson configure`. For example to set the default project type you would |
| set this: `default_options : ['buildtype=debugoptimized']`. Note |
| that these settings are only used when running Meson for the first |
| time. Global options such as `buildtype` can only be specified in |
| the master project, settings in subprojects are ignored. Project |
| specific options are used normally even in subprojects. |
| |
| |
| - `license`: takes a string or array of strings describing the license(s) the |
| code is under. To avoid ambiguity it is recommended to use a standardized |
| license identifier from the [SPDX license list](https://spdx.org/licenses/). |
| Usually this would be something like `license : 'GPL-2.0-or-later'`, but if |
| the code has multiple licenses you can specify them as an array like this: |
| `license : ['proprietary', 'GPL-3.0-only']`. Note that the text is informal |
| and is only written to the dependency manifest. Meson does not do any license |
| validation, you are responsible for verifying that you abide by all licensing |
| terms. You can access the value in your Meson build files with |
| `meson.project_license()`. |
| |
| - `meson_version`: takes a string describing which Meson version the |
| project requires. Usually something like `>=0.28.0`. |
| |
| - `subproject_dir`: specifies the top level directory name that holds |
| Meson subprojects. This is only meant as a compatibility option |
| for existing code bases that house their embedded source code in a |
| custom directory. All new projects should not set this but instead |
| use the default value. It should be noted that this keyword |
| argument is ignored inside subprojects. There can be only one |
| subproject dir and it is set in the top level Meson file. |
| |
| - `version`: which is a free form string describing the version of |
| this project. You can access the value in your Meson build files |
| with `meson.project_version()`. Since 0.57.0 this can also be a |
| `File` object pointing to a file that contains exactly one line of |
| text. |
| |
| ### run_command() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| runresult run_command(command, list_of_args, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Runs the command specified in positional arguments. `command` can be a |
| string, or the output of [`find_program()`](#find_program), |
| [`files()`](#files) or [`configure_file()`](#configure_file), or [a |
| compiler object](#compiler-object). |
| |
| Returns [an opaque object](#run-result-object) containing the result |
| of the invocation. The command is run from an *unspecified* directory, |
| and Meson will set three environment variables `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT`, |
| `MESON_BUILD_ROOT` and `MESON_SUBDIR` that specify the source |
| directory, build directory and subdirectory the target was defined in, |
| respectively. |
| |
| This function supports the following keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `check` *(since 0.47.0)*: takes a boolean. If `true`, the exit status code of the command will |
| be checked, and the configuration will fail if it is non-zero. The default is |
| `false`. |
| - `env` *(since 0.50.0)*: environment variables to set, such as `['NAME1=value1', |
| 'NAME2=value2']`, or an [`environment()` |
| object](#environment-object) which allows more sophisticated |
| environment juggling. *(since 0.52.0)* A dictionary is also accepted. |
| |
| See also [External commands](External-commands.md). |
| |
| ### run_target |
| |
| ``` meson |
| runtarget run_target(target_name, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| This function creates a new top-level target that runs a specified |
| command with the specified arguments. Like all top-level targets, this |
| integrates with the selected backend. For instance, you can run it as |
| `meson compile target_name`. Note that a run target produces no output |
| as far as Meson is concerned. It is only meant for tasks such as |
| running a code formatter or flashing an external device's firmware |
| with a built file. |
| |
| The command is run from an *unspecified* directory, and Meson will set |
| three environment variables `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT`, `MESON_BUILD_ROOT` |
| and `MESON_SUBDIR` that specify the source directory, build directory |
| and subdirectory the target was defined in, respectively. |
| |
| - `command` is a list containing the command to run and the arguments |
| to pass to it. Each list item may be a string or a target. For |
| instance, passing the return value of [`executable()`](#executable) |
| as the first item will run that executable, or passing a string as |
| the first item will find that command in `PATH` and run it. |
| - `depends` is a list of targets that this target depends on but which |
| are not listed in the command array (because, for example, the |
| script does file globbing internally) |
| - `env` *(since 0.57.0)*: environment variables to set, such as |
| `{'NAME1': 'value1', 'NAME2': 'value2'}` or `['NAME1=value1', 'NAME2=value2']`, |
| or an [`environment()` object](#environment-object) which allows more |
| sophisticated environment juggling. |
| |
| *Since 0.57.0* The template strings passed to `command` keyword arguments accept |
| the following special substitutions: |
| - `@SOURCE_ROOT@`: the path to the root of the source tree. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| - `@BUILD_ROOT@`: the path to the root of the build tree. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| - `@CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR@` *Since 0.57.1*: this is the directory where the currently |
| processed meson.build is located in. Depending on the backend, |
| this may be an absolute or a relative to current workdir path. |
| |
| ### set_variable() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void set_variable(variable_name, value) |
| ``` |
| |
| Assigns a value to the given variable name. Calling |
| `set_variable('foo', bar)` is equivalent to `foo = bar`. |
| |
| *(since 0.46.1)* The `value` parameter can be an array type. |
| |
| ### shared_library() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget shared_library(library_name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Builds a shared library with the given sources. Positional and keyword |
| arguments are the same as for [`library`](#library) with the following |
| extra keyword arguments. |
| |
| - `soversion`: a string specifying the soversion of this shared |
| library, such as `0`. On Linux and Windows this is used to set the |
| soversion (or equivalent) in the filename. For example, if |
| `soversion` is `4`, a Windows DLL will be called `foo-4.dll` and one |
| of the aliases of the Linux shared library would be |
| `libfoo.so.4`. If this is not specified, the first part of `version` |
| is used instead (see below). For example, if `version` is `3.6.0` and |
| `soversion` is not defined, it is set to `3`. |
| - `version`: a string specifying the version of this shared library, |
| such as `1.1.0`. On Linux and OS X, this is used to set the shared |
| library version in the filename, such as `libfoo.so.1.1.0` and |
| `libfoo.1.1.0.dylib`. If this is not specified, `soversion` is used |
| instead (see above). |
| - `darwin_versions` *(since 0.48.0)*: an integer, string, or a list of |
| versions to use for setting dylib `compatibility version` and |
| `current version` on macOS. If a list is specified, it must be |
| either zero, one, or two elements. If only one element is specified |
| or if it's not a list, the specified value will be used for setting |
| both compatibility version and current version. If unspecified, the |
| `soversion` will be used as per the aforementioned rules. |
| - `vs_module_defs`: a string, a File object, or Custom Target for a |
| Microsoft module definition file for controlling symbol exports, |
| etc., on platforms where that is possible (e.g. Windows). |
| |
| ### shared_module() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget shared_module(module_name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| *(since 0.37.0)* |
| |
| Builds a shared module with the given sources. Positional and keyword |
| arguments are the same as for [`library`](#library). |
| |
| This is useful for building modules that will be `dlopen()`ed and |
| hence may contain undefined symbols that will be provided by the |
| library that is loading it. |
| |
| If you want the shared module to be able to refer to functions and |
| variables defined in the [`executable`](#executable) it is loaded by, |
| you will need to set the `export_dynamic` argument of the executable to |
| `true`. |
| |
| Supports the following extra keyword arguments: |
| |
| - `vs_module_defs` *(since 0.52.0)*: a string, a File object, or |
| Custom Target for a Microsoft module definition file for controlling |
| symbol exports, etc., on platforms where that is possible |
| (e.g. Windows). |
| |
| **Note:** Linking to a shared module is not supported on some |
| platforms, notably OSX. Consider using a |
| [`shared_library`](#shared_library) instead, if you need to both |
| `dlopen()` and link with a library. |
| |
| ### static_library() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| buildtarget static_library(library_name, list_of_sources, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Builds a static library with the given sources. Positional and keyword |
| arguments are as for [`library`](#library), as well as: |
| |
| - `pic` *(since 0.36.0)*: builds the library as positional |
| independent code (so it can be linked into a shared library). This |
| option has no effect on Windows and OS X since it doesn't make |
| sense on Windows and PIC cannot be disabled on OS X. |
| |
| - `prelink` *since0.57.0*: if `true` the object files in the target |
| will be prelinked, meaning that it will contain only one prelinked |
| object file rather than the individual object files. |
| |
| ### subdir() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void subdir(dir_name, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Enters the specified subdirectory and executes the `meson.build` file |
| in it. Once that is done, it returns and execution continues on the |
| line following this `subdir()` command. Variables defined in that |
| `meson.build` file are then available for use in later parts of the |
| current build file and in all subsequent build files executed with |
| `subdir()`. |
| |
| Note that this means that each `meson.build` file in a source tree can |
| and must only be executed once. |
| |
| This function has one keyword argument. |
| |
| - `if_found`: takes one or several dependency objects and will only |
| recurse in the subdir if they all return `true` when queried with |
| `.found()` |
| |
| ### subdir_done() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| subdir_done() |
| ``` |
| |
| Stops further interpretation of the Meson script file from the point |
| of the invocation. All steps executed up to this point are valid and |
| will be executed by Meson. This means that all targets defined before |
| the call of `subdir_done` will be build. |
| |
| If the current script was called by `subdir` the execution returns to |
| the calling directory and continues as if the script had reached the |
| end. If the current script is the top level script Meson configures |
| the project as defined up to this point. |
| |
| Example: |
| ```meson |
| project('example exit', 'cpp') |
| executable('exe1', 'exe1.cpp') |
| subdir_done() |
| executable('exe2', 'exe2.cpp') |
| ``` |
| |
| The executable `exe1` will be build, while the executable `exe2` is not |
| build. |
| |
| ### subproject() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| subproject_object subproject(subproject_name, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Takes the project specified in the positional argument and brings that |
| in the current build specification by returning a [subproject |
| object](#subproject-object). Subprojects must always be placed inside |
| the `subprojects` directory at the top source directory. So for |
| example a subproject called `foo` must be located in |
| `${MESON_SOURCE_ROOT}/subprojects/foo`. Supports the following keyword |
| arguments: |
| |
| - `default_options` *(since 0.37.0)*: an array of default option values |
| that override those set in the subproject's `meson_options.txt` |
| (like `default_options` in `project`, they only have effect when |
| Meson is run for the first time, and command line arguments override |
| any default options in build files). *(since 0.54.0)*: `default_library` |
| built-in option can also be overridden. |
| - `version`: works just like the same as in `dependency`. |
| It specifies what version the subproject should be, as an example `>=1.0.1` |
| - `required` *(since 0.48.0)*: By default, `required` is `true` and |
| Meson will abort if the subproject could not be setup. You can set |
| this to `false` and then use the `.found()` method on the [returned |
| object](#subproject-object). You may also pass the value of a |
| [`feature`](Build-options.md#features) option, same as |
| [`dependency()`](#dependency). |
| |
| Note that you can use the returned [subproject |
| object](#subproject-object) to access any variable in the |
| subproject. However, if you want to use a dependency object from |
| inside a subproject, an easier way is to use the `fallback:` keyword |
| argument to [`dependency()`](#dependency). |
| |
| [See additional documentation](Subprojects.md). |
| |
| ### test() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| void test(name, executable, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| Defines a test to run with the test harness. Takes two positional |
| arguments, the first is the name of the test and the second is the |
| executable to run. The executable can be an [executable build target |
| object](#build-target-object) returned by |
| [`executable()`](#executable) or an [external program |
| object](#external-program-object) returned by |
| [`find_program()`](#find_program). |
| |
| *(since 0.55.0)* When cross compiling, if an exe_wrapper is needed and |
| defined the environment variable `MESON_EXE_WRAPPER` will be set to |
| the string value of that wrapper (implementation detail: using |
| `mesonlib.join_args`). Test scripts may use this to run cross built |
| binaries. If your test needs `MESON_EXE_WRAPPER` in cross build |
| situations it is your responsibility to return code 77 to tell the |
| harness to report "skip". |
| |
| By default, environment variable |
| [`MALLOC_PERTURB_`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/mallopt.3.html) |
| is automatically set by `meson test` to a random value between 1..255. |
| This can help find memory leaks on configurations using glibc, |
| including with non-GCC compilers. However, this can have a performance |
| impact, and may fail a test due to external libraries whose internals |
| are out of the user's control. To check if this feature is causing an |
| expected runtime crash, disable the feature by temporarily setting |
| environment variable `MALLOC_PERTURB_=0`. While it's preferable to |
| only temporarily disable this check, if a project requires permanent |
| disabling of this check in meson.build do like: |
| |
| ```meson |
| nomalloc = environment({'MALLOC_PERTURB_': '0'}) |
| |
| test(..., env: nomalloc, ...) |
| ``` |
| |
| #### test() Keyword arguments |
| |
| - `args`: arguments to pass to the executable |
| |
| - `env`: environment variables to set, such as `['NAME1=value1', |
| 'NAME2=value2']`, or an [`environment()` |
| object](#environment-object) which allows more sophisticated |
| environment juggling. *(since 0.52.0)* A dictionary is also accepted. |
| |
| - `is_parallel`: when false, specifies that no other test must be |
| running at the same time as this test |
| |
| - `should_fail`: when true the test is considered passed if the |
| executable returns a non-zero return value (i.e. reports an error) |
| |
| - `suite`: `'label'` (or list of labels `['label1', 'label2']`) |
| attached to this test. The suite name is qualified by a (sub)project |
| name resulting in `(sub)project_name:label`. In the case of a list |
| of strings, the suite names will be `(sub)project_name:label1`, |
| `(sub)project_name:label2`, etc. |
| |
| - `timeout`: the amount of seconds the test is allowed to run, a test |
| that exceeds its time limit is always considered failed, defaults to |
| 30 seconds. *Since 0.57* if timeout is `<= 0` the test has infinite duration, |
| in previous versions of Meson the test would fail with a timeout immediately. |
| |
| - `workdir`: absolute path that will be used as the working directory |
| for the test |
| |
| - `depends` *(since 0.46.0)*: specifies that this test depends on the specified |
| target(s), even though it does not take any of them as a command |
| line argument. This is meant for cases where test finds those |
| targets internally, e.g. plugins or globbing. Those targets are built |
| before test is executed even if they have `build_by_default : false`. |
| |
| - `protocol` *(since 0.50.0)*: specifies how the test results are parsed and can |
| be one of `exitcode`, `tap`, or `gtest`. For more information about test |
| harness protocol read [Unit Tests](Unit-tests.md). The following values are |
| accepted: |
| - `exitcode`: the executable's exit code is used by the test harness |
| to record the outcome of the test). |
| - `tap`: [Test Anything Protocol](https://www.testanything.org/). |
| - `gtest` *(since 0.55.0)*: for Google Tests. |
| - `rust` *(since 0.56.0)*: for native rust tests |
| |
| - `priority` *(since 0.52.0)*:specifies the priority of a test. Tests with a |
| higher priority are *started* before tests with a lower priority. |
| The starting order of tests with identical priorities is |
| implementation-defined. The default priority is 0, negative numbers are |
| permitted. |
| |
| Defined tests can be run in a backend-agnostic way by calling |
| `meson test` inside the build dir, or by using backend-specific |
| commands, such as `ninja test` or `msbuild RUN_TESTS.vcxproj`. |
| |
| ### vcs_tag() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| customtarget vcs_tag(...) |
| ``` |
| |
| This command detects revision control commit information at build time |
| and places it in the specified output file. This file is guaranteed to |
| be up to date on every build. Keywords are similar to `custom_target`. |
| |
| - `command`: string list with the command to execute, see |
| [`custom_target`](#custom_target) for details on how this command |
| must be specified |
| - `fallback`: version number to use when no revision control |
| information is present, such as when building from a release tarball |
| (defaults to `meson.project_version()`) |
| - `input`: file to modify (e.g. `version.c.in`) (required) |
| - `output`: file to write the results to (e.g. `version.c`) (required) |
| - `replace_string`: string in the input file to substitute with the |
| commit information (defaults to `@VCS_TAG@`) |
| |
| Meson will read the contents of `input`, substitute the |
| `replace_string` with the detected revision number, and write the |
| result to `output`. This method returns a |
| [`custom_target`](#custom_target) object that (as usual) should be |
| used to signal dependencies if other targets use the file outputted |
| by this. |
| |
| For example, if you generate a header with this and want to use that |
| in a build target, you must add the return value to the sources of |
| that build target. Without that, Meson will not know the order in |
| which to build the targets. |
| |
| If you desire more specific behavior than what this command provides, |
| you should use `custom_target`. |
| |
| ### range() |
| |
| ``` meson |
| rangeobject range(stop) |
| rangeobject range(start, stop[, step]) |
| ``` |
| |
| *Since 0.58.0* |
| |
| Return an opaque object that can be only be used in `foreach` statements. |
| - `start` must be integer greater or equal to 0. Defaults to 0. |
| - `stop` must be integer greater or equal to `start`. |
| - `step` must be integer greater or equal to 1. Defaults to 1. |
| |
| It cause the `foreach` loop to be called with the value from `start` included |
| to `stop` excluded with an increment of `step` after each loop. |
| |
| ```meson |
| # Loop 15 times with i from 0 to 14 included. |
| foreach i : range(15) |
| ... |
| endforeach |
| ``` |
| |
| The range object can also be assigned to a variable and indexed. |
| ```meson |
| r = range(5, 10, 2) |
| assert(r[2] == 9) |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Built-in objects |
| |
| These are built-in objects that are always available. |
| |
| ### `meson` object |
| |
| The `meson` object allows you to introspect various properties of the |
| system. This object is always mapped in the `meson` variable. It has |
| the following methods. |
| |
| - `add_dist_script(script_name, arg1, arg2, ...)` *(since 0.48.0)*: causes the script |
| given as argument to run during `dist` operation after the |
| distribution source has been generated but before it is |
| archived. Note that this runs the script file that is in the |
| _staging_ directory, not the one in the source directory. If the |
| script file can not be found in the staging directory, it is a hard |
| error. The `MESON_DIST_ROOT` environment variables is set when dist scripts is |
| run. |
| *(since 0.49.0)* Accepts multiple arguments for the script. |
| *(since 0.54.0)* The `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT` and `MESON_BUILD_ROOT` |
| environment variables are set when dist scripts are run. They are path to the |
| root source and build directory of the main project, even when the script |
| comes from a subproject. |
| *(since 0.55.0)* The output of `configure_file`, `files`, and `find_program` |
| as well as strings. |
| *(since 0.57.0)* `file` objects and the output of `configure_file` may be |
| used as the `script_name` parameter. |
| *(since 0.58.0)* This command can be invoked from a subproject, it was a hard |
| error in earlier versions. Subproject dist scripts will only be executed |
| when running `meson dist --include-subprojects`. `MESON_PROJECT_SOURCE_ROOT`, |
| `MESON_PROJECT_BUILD_ROOT` and `MESON_PROJECT_DIST_ROOT` environment |
| variables are set when dist scripts are run. They are identical to |
| `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT`, `MESON_BUILD_ROOT` and `MESON_DIST_ROOT` for main project |
| scripts, but for subproject scripts they have the path to the root of the |
| subproject appended, usually `subprojects/<subproject-name>`. |
| |
| - `add_install_script(script_name, arg1, arg2, ...)`: causes the script |
| given as an argument to be run during the install step, this script |
| will have the environment variables `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT`, |
| `MESON_BUILD_ROOT`, `MESON_INSTALL_PREFIX`, |
| `MESON_INSTALL_DESTDIR_PREFIX`, and `MESONINTROSPECT` set. |
| All positional arguments are passed as parameters. |
| *since 0.57.0* `skip_if_destdir` boolean keyword argument (defaults to `false`) |
| can be specified. If `true` the script will not be run if DESTDIR is set during |
| installation. This is useful in the case the script updates system wide |
| cache that is only needed when copying files into final destination. |
| |
| *(since 0.54.0)* If `meson install` is called with the `--quiet` option, the |
| environment variable `MESON_INSTALL_QUIET` will be set. |
| |
| *(since 0.55.0)* The output of `configure_file`, `files`, `find_program`, |
| `custom_target`, indexes of `custom_target`, `executable`, `library`, and |
| other built targets as well as strings. |
| |
| *(since 0.57.0)* `file` objects and the output of `configure_file` may be |
| *used as the `script_name` parameter. |
| |
| Meson uses the `DESTDIR` environment variable as set by the |
| inherited environment to determine the (temporary) installation |
| location for files. Your install script must be aware of this while |
| manipulating and installing files. The correct way to handle this is |
| with the `MESON_INSTALL_DESTDIR_PREFIX` variable which is always set |
| and contains `DESTDIR` (if set) and `prefix` joined together. This |
| is useful because both are usually absolute paths and there are |
| platform-specific edge-cases in joining two absolute paths. |
| |
| In case it is needed, `MESON_INSTALL_PREFIX` is also always set and |
| has the value of the `prefix` option passed to Meson. |
| |
| `MESONINTROSPECT` contains the path to the introspect command that |
| corresponds to the `meson` executable that was used to configure the |
| build. (This might be a different path than the first executable |
| found in `PATH`.) It can be used to query build configuration. Note |
| that the value will contain many parts, f.ex., it may be `python3 |
| /path/to/meson.py introspect`. The user is responsible for splitting |
| the string to an array if needed by splitting lexically like a UNIX |
| shell would. If your script uses Python, `shlex.split()` is the |
| easiest correct way to do this. |
| |
| - `add_postconf_script(script_name, arg1, arg2, ...)`: runs the |
| executable given as an argument after all project files have been |
| generated. This script will have the environment variables |
| `MESON_SOURCE_ROOT` and `MESON_BUILD_ROOT` set. |
| |
| *(since 0.55.0)* The output of `configure_file`, `files`, and `find_program` |
| as well as strings. |
| |
| *(since 0.57.0)* `file` objects and the output of `configure_file` may be |
| *used as the `script_name` parameter. |
| |
| - `backend()` *(since 0.37.0)*: returns a string representing the |
| current backend: `ninja`, `vs2010`, `vs2015`, `vs2017`, `vs2019`, |
| or `xcode`. |
| |
| - `build_root()`: returns a string with the absolute path to the build |
| root directory. *(deprecated since 0.56.0)*: this function will return the |
| build root of the parent project if called from a subproject, which is usually |
| not what you want. Try using `current_build_dir()` or `project_build_root()`. |
| In the rare cases where the root of the main project is needed, |
| use `global_build_root()` that has the same behaviour but with a more explicit |
| name. |
| |
| - `source_root()`: returns a string with the absolute path to the |
| source root directory. Note: you should use the `files()` function |
| to refer to files in the root source directory instead of |
| constructing paths manually with `meson.source_root()`. |
| *(deprecated since 0.56.0)*: This function will return the source root of the |
| parent project if called from a subproject, which is usually not what you want. |
| Try using `current_source_dir()` or `project_source_root()`. |
| In the rare cases where the root of the main project is needed, |
| use `global_source_root()` that has the same behaviour but with a more explicit |
| name. |
| |
| - `project_build_root()` *(since 0.56.0)*: returns a string with the absolute path |
| to the build root directory of the current (sub)project. |
| |
| - `project_source_root()` *(since 0.56.0)*: returns a string with the absolute path |
| to the source root directory of the current (sub)project. |
| |
| - `global_build_root()` *(since 0.58.0)*: returns a string with the absolute path |
| to the build root directory. This function will return the build root of the |
| main project if called from a subproject, which is usually not what you want. |
| It is usually preferable to use `current_build_dir()` or `project_build_root()`. |
| |
| - `global_source_root()` *(since 0.58.0)*: returns a string with the absolute path |
| to the source root directory. This function will return the source root of the |
| main project if called from a subproject, which is usually not what you want. |
| It is usually preferable to use `current_source_dir()` or `project_source_root()`. |
| |
| - `current_build_dir()`: returns a string with the absolute path to the |
| current build directory. |
| |
| - `current_source_dir()`: returns a string to the current source |
| directory. Note: **you do not need to use this function** when |
| passing files from the current source directory to a function since |
| that is the default. Also, you can use the `files()` function to |
| refer to files in the current or any other source directory instead |
| of constructing paths manually with `meson.current_source_dir()`. |
| |
| - `get_compiler(language)`: returns [an object describing a |
| compiler](#compiler-object), takes one positional argument which is |
| the language to use. It also accepts one keyword argument, `native` |
| which when set to true makes Meson return the compiler for the build |
| machine (the "native" compiler) and when false it returns the host |
| compiler (the "cross" compiler). If `native` is omitted, Meson |
| returns the "cross" compiler if we're currently cross-compiling and |
| the "native" compiler if we're not. |
| |
| - `get_cross_property(propname, fallback_value)`: |
| *Deprecated since 0.58.0, use `get_external_property()` instead*. |
| Returns the given property from a cross file, the optional fallback_value |
| is returned if not cross compiling or the given property is not found. |
| |
| - `get_external_property(propname, fallback_value, native: true/false)` |
| *(since 0.54.0)*: returns the given property from a native or cross file. |
| The optional fallback_value is returned if the given property is not found. |
| The optional `native: true` forces retrieving a variable from the |
| native file, even when cross-compiling. |
| If `native: false` or not specified, variable is retrieved from the |
| cross-file if cross-compiling, and from the native-file when not cross-compiling. |
| |
| - `has_external_property(propname, native: true/false)` |
| *(since 0.58.0)*: checks whether the given property exist in a native or |
| cross file. The optional `native: true` forces checking for the variable |
| in the native file, even when cross-compiling. |
| If `native: false` or not specified, the variable is checked for in the |
| cross-file if cross-compiling, and in the native-file when not cross-compiling. |
| |
| - `can_run_host_binaries()` *(since 0.55.0)*: returns true if the build machine can run |
| binaries compiled for the host. This returns true unless you are |
| cross compiling, need a helper to run host binaries, and don't have one. |
| For example when cross compiling from Linux to Windows, one can use `wine` |
| as the helper. |
| |
| - `has_exe_wrapper()`: *(since 0.55.0)* **(deprecated)**. Use `can_run_host_binaries` instead. |
| |
| - `install_dependency_manifest(output_name)`: installs a manifest file |
| containing a list of all subprojects, their versions and license |
| files to the file name given as the argument. |
| |
| - `is_cross_build()`: returns `true` if the current build is a [cross |
| build](Cross-compilation.md) and `false` otherwise. |
| |
| - `is_subproject()`: returns `true` if the current project is being |
| built as a subproject of some other project and `false` otherwise. |
| |
| - `is_unity()`: returns `true` when doing a [unity |
| build](Unity-builds.md) (multiple sources are combined before |
| compilation to reduce build time) and `false` otherwise. |
| |
| - `override_find_program(progname, program)` *(since 0.46.0)*: |
| specifies that whenever `find_program` is used to find a program |
| named `progname`, Meson should not look it up on the system but |
| instead return `program`, which may either be the result of |
| `find_program`, `configure_file` or `executable`. *(since 0.55.0)* If a version |
| check is passed to `find_program` for a program that has been overridden with |
| an executable, the current project version is used. |
| |
| If `program` is an `executable`, it cannot be used during configure. |
| |
| - `override_dependency(name, dep_object)` *(since 0.54.0)*: |
| specifies that whenever `dependency(name, ...)` is used, Meson should not |
| look it up on the system but instead return `dep_object`, which may either be |
| the result of `dependency()` or `declare_dependency()`. It takes optional |
| `native` keyword arguments. Doing this in a subproject allows the parent |
| project to retrieve the dependency without having to know the dependency |
| variable name: `dependency(name, fallback : subproject_name)`. |
| |
| - `project_version()`: returns the version string specified in |
| `project` function call. |
| |
| - `project_license()`: returns the array of licenses specified in |
| `project` function call. |
| |
| - `project_name()`: returns the project name specified in the `project` |
| function call. |
| |
| - `version()`: return a string with the version of Meson. |
| |
| - `add_devenv()`: *(Since 0.58.0)* add an [`environment()`](#environment) object |
| to the list of environments that will be applied when using [`meson devenv`](Commands.md#devenv) |
| command line. This is useful for developpers who wish to use the project without |
| installing it, it is often needed to set for example the path to plugins |
| directory, etc. Alternatively, a list or dictionary can be passed as first |
| argument. |
| ``` meson |
| devenv = environment() |
| devenv.set('PLUGINS_PATH', meson.current_build_dir()) |
| ... |
| meson.add_devenv(devenv) |
| ``` |
| |
| ### `build_machine` object |
| |
| Provides information about the build machine — the machine that is |
| doing the actual compilation. See |
| [Cross-compilation](Cross-compilation.md). It has the following |
| methods: |
| |
| - `cpu_family()`: returns the CPU family name. [This |
| table](Reference-tables.md#cpu-families) contains all known CPU |
| families. These are guaranteed to continue working. |
| |
| - `cpu()`: returns a more specific CPU name, such as `i686`, `amd64`, |
| etc. |
| |
| - `system()`: returns the operating system name. [This |
| table](Reference-tables.md#operating-system-names) Lists all of |
| the currently known Operating System names, these are guaranteed to |
| continue working. |
| |
| - `endian()`: returns `big` on big-endian systems and `little` on |
| little-endian systems. |
| |
| Currently, these values are populated using |
| [`platform.system()`](https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/platform.html#platform.system) |
| and |
| [`platform.machine()`](https://docs.python.org/3.4/library/platform.html#platform.machine). If |
| you think the returned values for any of these are incorrect for your |
| system or CPU, or if your OS is not in the linked table, please file |
| [a bug report](https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/new) with |
| details and we'll look into it. |
| |
| ### `host_machine` object |
| |
| Provides information about the host machine — the machine on which the |
| compiled binary will run. See |
| [Cross-compilation](Cross-compilation.md). |
| |
| It has the same methods as [`build_machine`](#build_machine-object). |
| |
| When not cross-compiling, all the methods return the same values as |
| `build_machine` (because the build machine is the host machine) |
| |
| Note that while cross-compiling, it simply returns the values defined |
| in the cross-info file. |
| |
| ### `target_machine` object |
| |
| Provides information about the target machine — the machine on which |
| the compiled binary's output will run. Hence, this object should only |
| be used while cross-compiling a compiler. See |
| [Cross-compilation](Cross-compilation.md). |
| |
| It has the same methods as [`build_machine`](#build_machine-object). |
| |
| When all compilation is 'native', all the methods return the same |
| values as `build_machine` (because the build machine is the host |
| machine and the target machine). |
| |
| Note that while cross-compiling, it simply returns the values defined |
| in the cross-info file. If `target_machine` values are not defined in |
| the cross-info file, `host_machine` values are returned instead. |
| |
| ### `string` object |
| |
| All [strings](Syntax.md#strings) have the following methods. Strings |
| are immutable, all operations return their results as a new string. |
| |
| - `contains(string)`: returns true if string contains the string |
| specified as the argument. |
| |
| - `endswith(string)`: returns true if string ends with the string |
| specified as the argument. |
| |
| - `format()`: formats text, see the [Syntax |
| manual](Syntax.md#string-formatting) for usage info. |
| |
| - `join(list_of_strings)`: the opposite of split, for example |
| `'.'.join(['a', 'b', 'c']` yields `'a.b.c'`. |
| |
| - `replace('old_substr', 'new_str')` *(since 0.58.0)*: replaces instances of |
| `old_substr` in the string with `new_str` and returns a new string |
| |
| - `split(split_character)`: splits the string at the specified |
| character (or whitespace if not set) and returns the parts in an |
| array. |
| |
| - `startswith(string)`: returns true if string starts with the string |
| specified as the argument |
| |
| - `substring(start,end)` *(since 0.56.0)*: returns a substring specified from start to end. |
| Both `start` and `end` arguments are optional, so, for example, `'foobar'.substring()` will return `'foobar'`. |
| |
| - `strip()`: removes whitespace at the beginning and end of the string. |
| *(since 0.43.0)* Optionally can take one positional string argument, |
| and all characters in that string will be stripped. |
| |
| - `to_int()`: returns the string converted to an integer (error if string |
| is not a number). |
| |
| - `to_lower()`: creates a lower case version of the string. |
| |
| - `to_upper()`: creates an upper case version of the string. |
| |
| - `underscorify()`: creates a string where every non-alphabetical |
| non-number character is replaced with `_`. |
| |
| - `version_compare(comparison_string)`: does semantic version |
| comparison, if `x = '1.2.3'` then `x.version_compare('>1.0.0')` |
| returns `true`. |
| |
| ### `Number` object |
| |
| [Numbers](Syntax.md#numbers) support these methods: |
| |
| - `is_even()`: returns true if the number is even |
| - `is_odd()`: returns true if the number is odd |
| - `to_string()`: returns the value of the number as a string. |
| |
| ### `boolean` object |
| |
| A [boolean](Syntax.md#booleans) object has two simple methods: |
| |
| - `to_int()`: returns either `1` or `0`. |
| |
| - `to_string()`: returns the string `'true'` if the boolean is true or |
| `'false'` otherwise. You can also pass it two strings as positional |
| arguments to specify what to return for true/false. For instance, |
| `bool.to_string('yes', 'no')` will return `yes` if the boolean is |
| true and `no` if it is false. |
| |
| ### `array` object |
| |
| The following methods are defined for all [arrays](Syntax.md#arrays): |
| |
| - `contains(item)`: returns `true` if the array contains the object |
| given as argument, `false` otherwise |
| |
| - `get(index, fallback)`: returns the object at the given index, |
| negative indices count from the back of the array, indexing out of |
| bounds returns the `fallback` value *(since 0.38.0)* or, if it is |
| not specified, causes a fatal error |
| |
| - `length()`: the size of the array |
| |
| You can also iterate over arrays with the [`foreach` |
| statement](Syntax.md#foreach-statements). |
| |
| ### `dictionary` object |
| |
| *(since 0.47.0)* |
| |
| The following methods are defined for all [dictionaries](Syntax.md#dictionaries): |
| |
| - `has_key(key)`: returns `true` if the dictionary contains the key |
| given as argument, `false` otherwise |
| |
| - `get(key, fallback)`: returns the value for the key given as first |
| argument if it is present in the dictionary, or the optional |
| fallback value given as the second argument. If a single argument |
| was given and the key was not found, causes a fatal error |
| |
| - `keys()`: returns an array of keys in the dictionary |
| |
| You can also iterate over dictionaries with the [`foreach` |
| statement](Syntax.md#foreach-statements). |
| |
| *(since 0.48.0)* Dictionaries can be added (e.g. `d1 = d2 + d3` and `d1 += d2`). |
| Values from the second dictionary overrides values from the first. |
| |
| ## Returned objects |
| |
| These are objects returned by the [functions listed above](#functions). |
| |
| ### `compiler` object |
| |
| This object is returned by |
| [`meson.get_compiler(lang)`](#meson-object). It represents a compiler |
| for a given language and allows you to query its properties. It has |
| the following methods: |
| |
| - `alignment(typename)`: returns the alignment of the type specified in |
| the positional argument, you can specify external dependencies to |
| use with `dependencies` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `cmd_array()`: returns an array containing the command(s) for the compiler. |
| |
| - `compiles(code)`: returns true if the code fragment given in the |
| positional argument compiles, you can specify external dependencies |
| to use with `dependencies` keyword argument, `code` can be either a |
| string containing source code or a `file` object pointing to the |
| source code. |
| |
| - `compute_int(expr, ...')`: computes the value of the given expression |
| (as an example `1 + 2`). When cross compiling this is evaluated with |
| an iterative algorithm, you can specify keyword arguments `low` |
| (defaults to -1024), `high` (defaults to 1024) and `guess` to |
| specify max and min values for the search and the value to try |
| first. |
| |
| - `find_library(lib_name, ...)`: tries to find the library specified in |
| the positional argument. The [result |
| object](#external-library-object) can be used just like the return |
| value of `dependency`. If the keyword argument `required` is false, |
| Meson will proceed even if the library is not found. By default the |
| library is searched for in the system library directory |
| (e.g. /usr/lib). This can be overridden with the `dirs` keyword |
| argument, which can be either a string or a list of strings. |
| *(since 0.47.0)* The value of a [`feature`](Build-options.md#features) |
| option can also be passed to the `required` keyword argument. |
| *(since 0.49.0)* If the keyword argument `disabler` is `true` and the |
| dependency couldn't be found, return a [disabler object](#disabler-object) |
| instead of a not-found dependency. *(since 0.50.0)* The `has_headers` keyword |
| argument can be a list of header files that must be found as well, using |
| `has_header()` method. All keyword arguments prefixed with `header_` will be |
| passed down to `has_header()` method with the prefix removed. *(since 0.51.0)* |
| The `static` keyword (boolean) can be set to `true` to limit the search to |
| static libraries and `false` for dynamic/shared. |
| |
| - `first_supported_argument(list_of_strings)`: given a list of |
| strings, returns the first argument that passes the `has_argument` |
| test or an empty array if none pass. |
| |
| - `first_supported_link_argument(list_of_strings)` *(since 0.46.0)*: |
| given a list of strings, returns the first argument that passes the |
| `has_link_argument` test or an empty array if none pass. |
| |
| - `get_define(definename)`: returns the given preprocessor symbol's |
| value as a string or empty string if it is not defined. |
| *(since 0.47.0)* This method will concatenate string literals as |
| the compiler would. E.g. `"a" "b"` will become `"ab"`. |
| |
| - `get_id()`: returns a string identifying the compiler. For example, |
| `gcc`, `msvc`, [and more](Reference-tables.md#compiler-ids). |
| |
| - `get_argument_syntax()` *(since 0.49.0)*: returns a string identifying the type |
| of arguments the compiler takes. Can be one of `gcc`, `msvc`, or an undefined |
| string value. This method is useful for identifying compilers that are not |
| gcc or msvc, but use the same argument syntax as one of those two compilers |
| such as clang or icc, especially when they use different syntax on different |
| operating systems. |
| |
| - `get_linker_id()` *(since 0.53.0)*: returns a string identifying the linker. |
| For example, `ld.bfd`, `link`, [and more](Reference-tables.md#linker-ids). |
| |
| - `get_supported_arguments(list_of_string)` *(since 0.43.0)*: returns |
| an array containing only the arguments supported by the compiler, |
| as if `has_argument` were called on them individually. |
| |
| - `get_supported_link_arguments(list_of_string)` *(since 0.46.0)*: returns |
| an array containing only the arguments supported by the linker, |
| as if `has_link_argument` were called on them individually. |
| |
| - `has_argument(argument_name)`: returns true if the compiler accepts |
| the specified command line argument, that is, can compile code |
| without erroring out or printing a warning about an unknown flag. |
| |
| - `has_link_argument(argument_name)` *(since 0.46.0)*: returns true if |
| the linker accepts the specified command line argument, that is, can |
| compile and link code without erroring out or printing a warning |
| about an unknown flag. Link arguments will be passed to the |
| compiler, so should usually have the `-Wl,` prefix. On VisualStudio |
| a `/link` argument will be prepended. |
| |
| - `has_function(funcname)`: returns true if the given function is |
| provided by the standard library or a library passed in with the |
| `args` keyword, you can specify external dependencies to use with |
| `dependencies` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `check_header(header_name)` *(since 0.47.0)*: returns true if the |
| specified header is *usable* with the specified prefix, |
| dependencies, and arguments. You can specify external dependencies |
| to use with `dependencies` keyword argument and extra code to put |
| above the header test with the `prefix` keyword. In order to look |
| for headers in a specific directory you can use `args : |
| '-I/extra/include/dir`, but this should only be used in exceptional |
| cases for includes that can't be detected via pkg-config and passed |
| via `dependencies`. *(since 0.50.0)* The `required` keyword argument |
| can be used to abort if the header cannot be found. |
| |
| - `has_header(header_name)`: returns true if the specified header |
| *exists*, and is faster than `check_header()` since it only does a |
| pre-processor check. You can specify external dependencies to use |
| with `dependencies` keyword argument and extra code to put above the |
| header test with the `prefix` keyword. In order to look for headers |
| in a specific directory you can use `args : '-I/extra/include/dir`, |
| but this should only be used in exceptional cases for includes that |
| can't be detected via pkg-config and passed via `dependencies`. |
| *(since 0.50.0)* The `required` keyword argument can be used to |
| abort if the header cannot be found. |
| |
| - `has_header_symbol(headername, symbolname)`: detects |
| whether a particular symbol (function, variable, #define, type |
| definition, etc) is declared in the specified header, you can |
| specify external dependencies to use with `dependencies` keyword |
| argument. *(since 0.50.0)* The `required` keyword argument can be |
| used to abort if the symbol cannot be found. |
| |
| - `has_member(typename, membername)`: takes two arguments, type name |
| and member name and returns true if the type has the specified |
| member, you can specify external dependencies to use with |
| `dependencies` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `has_members(typename, membername1, membername2, ...)`: takes at |
| least two arguments, type name and one or more member names, returns |
| true if the type has all the specified members, you can specify |
| external dependencies to use with `dependencies` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `has_multi_arguments(arg1, arg2, arg3, ...)` *(since 0.37.0)*: the same as |
| `has_argument` but takes multiple arguments and uses them all in a |
| single compiler invocation. |
| |
| - `has_multi_link_arguments(arg1, arg2, arg3, ...)` *(since 0.46.0)*: |
| the same as `has_link_argument` but takes multiple arguments and |
| uses them all in a single compiler invocation. |
| |
| - `has_type(typename)`: returns true if the specified token is a type, |
| you can specify external dependencies to use with `dependencies` |
| keyword argument. |
| |
| - `links(code)`: returns true if the code fragment given in the |
| positional argument compiles and links, you can specify external |
| dependencies to use with `dependencies` keyword argument, `code` can |
| be either a string containing source code or a `file` object |
| pointing to the source code. |
| |
| - `run(code)`: attempts to compile and execute the given code fragment, |
| returns a run result object, you can specify external dependencies |
| to use with `dependencies` keyword argument, `code` can be either a |
| string containing source code or a `file` object pointing to the |
| source code. |
| |
| - `symbols_have_underscore_prefix()` *(since 0.37.0)*: returns `true` |
| if the C symbol mangling is one underscore (`_`) prefixed to the symbol. |
| |
| - `sizeof(typename, ...)`: returns the size of the given type |
| (e.g. `'int'`) or -1 if the type is unknown, to add includes set |
| them in the `prefix` keyword argument, you can specify external |
| dependencies to use with `dependencies` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `version()`: returns the compiler's version number as a string. |
| |
| - `has_function_attribute(name)` *(since 0.48.0)*: returns `true` if the |
| compiler supports the GNU style (`__attribute__(...)`) `name`. This is |
| preferable to manual compile checks as it may be optimized for compilers that |
| do not support such attributes. |
| [This table](Reference-tables.md#gcc-__attribute__) lists all of the |
| supported attributes. |
| |
| - `get_supported_function_attributes(list_of_names)` *(since 0.48.0)*: |
| returns an array containing any names that are supported GCC style |
| attributes. Equivalent to `has_function_attribute` was called on each of them |
| individually. |
| |
| The following keyword arguments can be used: |
| |
| - `args`: used to pass a list of compiler arguments that are |
| required to find the header or symbol. For example, you might need |
| to pass the include path `-Isome/path/to/header` if a header is not |
| in the default include path. *(since 0.38.0)* you should use the |
| `include_directories` keyword described below. You may also want to |
| pass a library name `-lfoo` for `has_function` to check for a function. |
| Supported by all methods except `get_id`, `version`, and `find_library`. |
| |
| - `include_directories` *(since 0.38.0)*: specifies extra directories for |
| header searches. |
| |
| - `name`: the name to use for printing a message about the compiler |
| check. Supported by the methods `compiles()`, `links()`, and |
| `run()`. If this keyword argument is not passed to those methods, no |
| message will be printed about the check. |
| |
| - `no_builtin_args`: when set to true, the compiler arguments controlled |
| by built-in configuration options are not added. |
| |
| - `prefix`: adds #includes and other things that are |
| required for the symbol to be declared. System definitions should be |
| passed via compiler args (eg: `_GNU_SOURCE` is often required for |
| some symbols to be exposed on Linux, and it should be passed via |
| `args` keyword argument, see below). Supported by the methods |
| `sizeof`, `has_type`, `has_function`, `has_member`, `has_members`, |
| `check_header`, `has_header`, `has_header_symbol`, `get_define` |
| |
| **Note:** These compiler checks do not use compiler arguments added |
| with `add_*_arguments()`, via `-Dlang_args` on the command-line, or |
| through `CFLAGS`/`LDFLAGS`, etc in the environment. Hence, you can |
| trust that the tests will be fully self-contained, and won't fail |
| because of custom flags added by other parts of the build file or by |
| users. |
| |
| Note that if you have a single prefix with all your dependencies, you |
| might find it easier to append to the environment variables |
| `C_INCLUDE_PATH` with GCC/Clang and `INCLUDE` with MSVC to expand the |
| default include path, and `LIBRARY_PATH` with GCC/Clang and `LIB` with |
| MSVC to expand the default library search path. |
| |
| However, with GCC, these variables will be ignored when |
| cross-compiling. In that case you need to use a specs file. See: |
| <http://www.mingw.org/wiki/SpecsFileHOWTO> |
| |
| ### `build target` object |
| |
| A build target is either an [executable](#executable), [shared |
| library](#shared_library), [static library](#static_library), [both |
| shared and static library](#both_libraries) or [shared |
| module](#shared_module). |
| |
| - `extract_all_objects()`: is same as `extract_objects` but returns all |
| object files generated by this target. *(since 0.46.0)* keyword argument |
| `recursive` must be set to `true` to also return objects passed to |
| the `object` argument of this target. By default only objects built |
| for this target are returned to maintain backward compatibility with |
| previous versions. The default will eventually be changed to `true` |
| in a future version. |
| |
| - `extract_objects(source1, source2, ...)`: takes as its arguments |
| a number of source files as [`string`](#string-object) or |
| [`files()`](#files) and returns an opaque value representing the |
| object files generated for those source files. This is typically used |
| to take single object files and link them to unit tests or to compile |
| some source files with custom flags. To use the object file(s) |
| in another build target, use the `objects:` keyword argument. |
| |
| - `full_path()`: returns a full path pointing to the result target file. |
| NOTE: In most cases using the object itself will do the same job as |
| this and will also allow Meson to setup inter-target dependencies |
| correctly. Please file a bug if that doesn't work for you. |
| |
| - `private_dir_include()`: returns a opaque value that works like |
| `include_directories` but points to the private directory of this |
| target, usually only needed if an another target needs to access |
| some generated internal headers of this target |
| |
| - `name()` *(since 0.54.0)*: returns the target name. |
| |
| |
| ### `configuration` data object |
| |
| This object is returned by |
| [`configuration_data()`](#configuration_data) and encapsulates |
| configuration values to be used for generating configuration files. A |
| more in-depth description can be found in the [the configuration wiki |
| page](Configuration.md) It has three methods: |
| |
| - `get(varname, default_value)`: returns the value of `varname`, if the |
| value has not been set returns `default_value` if it is defined |
| *(since 0.38.0)* and errors out if not |
| |
| - `get_unquoted(varname, default_value)` *(since 0.44.0)*: returns the value |
| of `varname` but without surrounding double quotes (`"`). If the value has |
| not been set returns `default_value` if it is defined and errors out if not. |
| |
| - `has(varname)`: returns `true` if the specified variable is set |
| |
| - `keys()`*(since 0.57.0)*: returns an array of keys of |
| the configuration data object. |
| |
| You can iterate over this array with the [`foreach` |
| statement](Syntax.md#foreach-statements). |
| |
| - `merge_from(other)` *(since 0.42.0)*: takes as argument a different |
| configuration data object and copies all entries from that object to |
| the current. |
| |
| - `set(varname, value)`, sets a variable to a given value |
| |
| - `set10(varname, boolean_value)` is the same as above but the value |
| is either `true` or `false` and will be written as 1 or 0, |
| respectively |
| |
| - `set_quoted(varname, value)` is same as `set` but quotes the value |
| in double quotes (`"`) |
| |
| They all take the `description` keyword that will be written in the |
| result file. The replacement assumes a file with C syntax. If your |
| generated file is source code in some other language, you probably |
| don't want to add a description field because it most likely will |
| cause a syntax error. |
| |
| ### `custom target` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`custom_target`](#custom_target) and |
| contains a target with the following methods: |
| |
| - `full_path()`: returns a full path pointing to the result target file |
| NOTE: In most cases using the object itself will do the same job as |
| this and will also allow Meson to setup inter-target dependencies |
| correctly. Please file a bug if that doesn't work for you. |
| *(since 0.54.0)* It can be also called on indexes objects: |
| `custom_targets[i].full_path()`. |
| |
| - `[index]`: returns an opaque object that references this target, and |
| can be used as a source in other targets. When it is used as such it |
| will make that target depend on this custom target, but the only |
| source added will be the one that corresponds to the index of the |
| custom target's output argument. |
| |
| - `to_list()` *(since 0.54.0)*: returns a list of opaque objects that references |
| this target, and can be used as a source in other targets. This can be used to |
| iterate outputs with `foreach` loop. |
| |
| ### `dependency` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`dependency()`](#dependency) and contains |
| an external dependency with the following methods: |
| |
| - `found()`: returns whether the dependency was found. |
| |
| - `name()` *(since 0.48.0)*: returns the name of the dependency that was |
| searched. Returns `internal` for dependencies created with |
| `declare_dependency()`. |
| |
| - `get_pkgconfig_variable(varname)` *(since 0.36.0)*: gets the |
| pkg-config variable specified, or, if invoked on a non pkg-config |
| dependency, error out. *(since 0.44.0)* You can also redefine a |
| variable by passing a list to the `define_variable` parameter |
| that can affect the retrieved variable: `['prefix', '/'])`. |
| *(since 0.45.0)* A warning is issued if the variable is not defined, |
| unless a `default` parameter is specified. |
| |
| *(Deprecated since 0.56.0*) use `get_variable(pkgconfig : ...)` instead |
| |
| - `get_configtool_variable(varname)` *(since 0.44.0)*: gets the |
| command line argument from the config tool (with `--` prepended), or, |
| if invoked on a non config-tool dependency, error out. |
| |
| *(Deprecated since 0.56.0*) use `get_variable(configtool : ...)` instead |
| |
| - `type_name()`: returns a string describing the type of the |
| dependency, the most common values are `internal` for deps created |
| with `declare_dependency()` and `pkgconfig` for system dependencies |
| obtained with Pkg-config. |
| |
| - `version()`: the version number as a string, for example `1.2.8`. |
| `unknown` if the dependency provider doesn't support determining the |
| version. |
| |
| - `include_type()`: returns whether the value set by the `include_type` kwarg |
| |
| - `as_system(value)`: returns a copy of the dependency object, which has changed |
| the value of `include_type` to `value`. The `value` argument is optional and |
| defaults to `'preserve'`. |
| |
| - `as_link_whole()` *Since 0.56.0* Only dependencies created with |
| `declare_dependency()`, returns a copy of the dependency object with all |
| link_with arguments changed to link_whole. This is useful for example for |
| fallback dependency from a subproject built with `default_library=static`. |
| Note that all `link_with` objects must be static libraries otherwise an error |
| will be raised when trying to `link_whole` a shared library. |
| |
| - `partial_dependency(compile_args : false, link_args : false, links |
| : false, includes : false, sources : false)` *(since 0.46.0)*: returns |
| a new dependency object with the same name, version, found status, |
| type name, and methods as the object that called it. This new |
| object will only inherit other attributes from its parent as |
| controlled by keyword arguments. |
| |
| If the parent has any dependencies, those will be applied to the new |
| partial dependency with the same rules. So, given: |
| |
| ```meson |
| dep1 = declare_dependency(compile_args : '-Werror=foo', link_with : 'libfoo') |
| dep2 = declare_dependency(compile_args : '-Werror=bar', dependencies : dep1) |
| dep3 = dep2.partial_dependency(compile_args : true) |
| ``` |
| |
| dep3 will add `['-Werror=foo', '-Werror=bar']` to the compiler args |
| of any target it is added to, but libfoo will not be added to the |
| link_args. |
| |
| *Note*: A bug present until 0.50.1 results in the above behavior |
| not working correctly. |
| |
| The following arguments will add the following attributes: |
| |
| - compile_args: any arguments passed to the compiler |
| - link_args: any arguments passed to the linker |
| - links: anything passed via link_with or link_whole |
| - includes: any include_directories |
| - sources: any compiled or static sources the dependency has |
| |
| - `get_variable(varname, cmake : str, pkgconfig : str, configtool : str, |
| internal: str, default_value : str, pkgconfig_define : [str, str])` |
| *(since 0.51.0)*: a generic variable getter method, which replaces the |
| get_*type*_variable methods. This allows one to get the variable |
| from a dependency without knowing specifically how that dependency |
| was found. If default_value is set and the value cannot be gotten |
| from the object then default_value is returned, if it is not set |
| then an error is raised. |
| *(since 0.54.0)* added `internal` keyword. |
| *(since 0.58.0)* added `varname` as first positional argument. It is used as |
| default value for `cmake`, `pkgconfig`, `configtool` and `internal` keyword |
| arguments. It is useful in the common case where `pkgconfig` and `internal` |
| use the same variable name, in which case it's easier to write `dep.get_variable('foo')` |
| instead of `dep.get_variable(pkgconfig: 'foo', internal: 'foo')`. |
| |
| ### `disabler` object |
| |
| A disabler object is an object that behaves in much the same way as |
| NaN numbers do in floating point math. That is when used in any |
| statement (function call, logical op, etc) they will cause the |
| statement evaluation to immediately short circuit to return a disabler |
| object. A disabler object has one method: |
| |
| - `found()`: always returns `false`. |
| |
| ### `external program` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`find_program()`](#find_program) and |
| contains an external (i.e. not built as part of this project) program |
| and has the following methods: |
| |
| - `found()`: returns whether the executable was found. |
| |
| - `path()`: *(since 0.55.0)* **(deprecated)** use `full_path()` instead. |
| Returns a string pointing to the script or executable |
| **NOTE:** You should not need to use this method. Passing the object |
| itself should work in all cases. For example: `run_command(obj, arg1, arg2)`. |
| |
| - `full_path()` (*since 0.55.0*): which returns a string pointing to the script or |
| executable **NOTE:** You should not need to use this method. Passing the object |
| itself should work in all cases. For example: `run_command(obj, arg1, arg2)`. |
| |
| ### `environment` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`environment()`](#environment) and stores |
| detailed information about how environment variables should be set |
| during tests. It should be passed as the `env` keyword argument to |
| tests and other functions. It has the following methods. |
| |
| - `append(varname, value1, value2, ...)`: appends the given values to |
| the old value of the environment variable, e.g. `env.append('FOO', |
| 'BAR', 'BAZ', separator : ';')` produces `BOB;BAR;BAZ` if `FOO` had |
| the value `BOB` and plain `BAR;BAZ` if the value was not defined. If |
| the separator is not specified explicitly, the default path |
| separator for the host operating system will be used, i.e. ';' for |
| Windows and ':' for UNIX/POSIX systems. |
| |
| - `prepend(varname, value1, value2, ...)`: same as `append` |
| except that it writes to the beginning of the variable. |
| |
| - `set(varname, value1, value2)`: sets the environment variable |
| specified in the first argument to the values in the second argument |
| joined by the separator, e.g. `env.set('FOO', 'BAR'),` sets envvar |
| `FOO` to value `BAR`. See `append()` above for how separators work. |
| |
| *Since 0.58.0* `append()` and `prepend()` methods can be called multiple times |
| on the same `varname`. Earlier Meson versions would warn and only the last |
| operation took effect. |
| |
| ```meson |
| env = environment() |
| |
| # MY_PATH will be '0:1:2:3' |
| env.set('MY_PATH', '1') |
| env.append('MY_PATH', '2') |
| env.append('MY_PATH', '3') |
| env.prepend('MY_PATH', '0') |
| ``` |
| |
| ### `external library` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`find_library()`](#find_library) and |
| contains an external (i.e. not built as part of this project) |
| library. This object has the following methods: |
| |
| - `found()`: returns whether the library was found. |
| |
| - `type_name()` *(since 0.48.0)*: returns a string describing |
| the type of the dependency, which will be `library` in this case. |
| |
| - `partial_dependency(compile_args : false, link_args : false, links |
| : false, includes : false, source : false)` *(since 0.46.0)*: returns |
| a new dependency object with the same name, version, found status, |
| type name, and methods as the object that called it. This new |
| object will only inherit other attributes from its parent as |
| controlled by keyword arguments. |
| |
| ### Feature option object |
| |
| *(since 0.47.0)* |
| |
| The following methods are defined for all [`feature` options](Build-options.md#features): |
| |
| - `enabled()`: returns whether the feature was set to `'enabled'` |
| - `disabled()`: returns whether the feature was set to `'disabled'` |
| - `auto()`: returns whether the feature was set to `'auto'` |
| |
| ### `generator` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`generator()`](#generator) and contains a |
| generator that is used to transform files from one type to another by |
| an executable (e.g. `idl` files into source code and headers). |
| |
| - `process(list_of_files, ...)`: takes a list of files, causes them to |
| be processed and returns an object containing the result which can |
| then, for example, be passed into a build target definition. The |
| keyword argument `extra_args`, if specified, will be used to replace |
| an entry `@EXTRA_ARGS@` in the argument list. The keyword argument |
| `preserve_path_from`, if given, specifies that the output files need |
| to maintain their directory structure inside the target temporary |
| directory. The most common value for this is |
| `meson.current_source_dir()`. With this value when a file called |
| `subdir/one.input` is processed it generates a file `<target private |
| directory>/subdir/one.out` as opposed to `<target private |
| directory>/one.out`. |
| |
| ### `subproject` object |
| |
| This object is returned by [`subproject()`](#subproject) and is an |
| opaque object representing it. |
| |
| - `found()` *(since 0.48.0)*: returns whether the subproject was |
| successfully setup |
| |
| - `get_variable(name, fallback)`: fetches the specified variable from |
| inside the subproject. This is useful to, for instance, get a |
| [declared dependency](#declare_dependency) from the |
| [subproject](Subprojects.md). |
| |
| If the variable does not exist, the variable `fallback` is returned. |
| If a fallback is not specified, then attempting to read a non-existing |
| variable will cause a fatal error. |
| |
| ### `run result` object |
| |
| This object encapsulates the result of trying to compile and run a |
| sample piece of code with [`compiler.run()`](#compiler-object) or |
| [`run_command()`](#run_command). It has the following methods: |
| |
| - `compiled()`: if true, the compilation succeeded, if false it did not |
| and the other methods return unspecified data. This is only available |
| for `compiler.run()` results. |
| - `returncode()`: the return code of executing the compiled binary |
| - `stderr()`: the standard error produced when the command was run |
| - `stdout()`: the standard out produced when the command was run |