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198 lines
5.4 KiB
198 lines
5.4 KiB
5 years ago
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---
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short-description: Build-time configuration options
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...
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# Configuration
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If there are multiple configuration options, passing them through
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compiler flags becomes very burdensome. It also makes the
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configuration settings hard to inspect. To make things easier, Meson
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supports the generation of configure files. This feature is similar to
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one found in other build systems such as CMake.
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Suppose we have the following Meson snippet:
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```meson
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conf_data = configuration_data()
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conf_data.set('version', '1.2.3')
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configure_file(input : 'config.h.in',
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output : 'config.h',
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configuration : conf_data)
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```
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and that the contents of `config.h.in` are
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```c
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#define VERSION_STR "@version@"
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```
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Meson will then create a file called `config.h` in the corresponding
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build directory whose contents are the following.
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```c
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#define VERSION_STR "1.2.3"
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```
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More specifically, Meson will find all strings of the type `@varname@`
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and replace them with respective values set in `conf_data`. You can
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use a single `configuration_data` object as many times as you like,
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but it becomes immutable after being passed to the `configure_file`
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function. That is, after it has been used once to generate output the
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`set` function becomes unusable and trying to call it causes an error.
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Copy of immutable `configuration_data` is still immutable.
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For more complex configuration file generation Meson provides a second
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form. To use it, put a line like this in your configuration file.
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#mesondefine TOKEN
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The replacement that happens depends on what the value and type of TOKEN is:
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```c
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#define TOKEN // If TOKEN is set to boolean true.
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#undef TOKEN // If TOKEN is set to boolean false.
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#define TOKEN 4 // If TOKEN is set to an integer or string value.
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/* undef TOKEN */ // If TOKEN has not been set to any value.
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```
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Note that if you want to define a C string, you need to do the quoting
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yourself like this:
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```meson
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conf_data.set('TOKEN', '"value"')
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```
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Since this is such a common operation, Meson provides a convenience
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method:
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```meson
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plain_var = 'value'
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conf_data.set_quoted('TOKEN', plain_var) # becomes #define TOKEN "value"
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```
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Often you have a boolean value in Meson but need to define the C/C++
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token as 0 or 1. Meson provides a convenience function for this use
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case.
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```meson
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conf_data.set10(token, boolean_value)
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# The line above is equivalent to this:
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if boolean_value
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conf_data.set(token, 1)
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else
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conf_data.set(token, 0)
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endif
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```
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## Configuring without an input file
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If the input file is not defined then Meson will generate a header
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file all the entries in the configuration data object. The
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replacements are the same as when generating `#mesondefine` entries:
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```meson
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conf_data.set('FOO', '"string"') => #define FOO "string"
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conf_data.set('FOO', 'a_token') => #define FOO a_token
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conf_data.set('FOO', true) => #define FOO
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conf_data.set('FOO', false) => #undef FOO
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conf_data.set('FOO', 1) => #define FOO 1
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conf_data.set('FOO', 0) => #define FOO 0
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```
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In this mode, you can also specify a comment which will be placed
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before the value so that your generated files are self-documenting.
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```meson
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conf_data.set('BAR', true, description : 'Set BAR if it is available')
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```
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Will produce:
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```c
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/* Set BAR if it is available */
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#define BAR
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```
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## Dealing with file encodings
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The default meson file encoding to configure files is utf-8. If you need to
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configure a file that is not utf-8 encoded the encoding keyword will allow
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you to specify which file encoding to use. It is however strongly advised to
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convert your non utf-8 file to utf-8 whenever possible. Supported file
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encodings are those of python3, see [standard-encodings](https://docs.python.org/3/library/codecs.html#standard-encodings).
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## Using dictionaries
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Since *0.49.0* `configuration_data()` takes an optional dictionary as first
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argument. If provided, each key/value pair is added into the
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`configuration_data` as if `set()` method was called for each of them.
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`configure_file()`'s `configuration` kwarg also accepts a dictionary instead of
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a configuration_data object.
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Example:
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```meson
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cdata = configuration_data({
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'STRING' : '"foo"',
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'INT' : 42,
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'DEFINED' : true,
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'UNDEFINED' : false,
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})
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configure_file(output : 'config1.h',
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configuration : cdata,
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)
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configure_file(output : 'config2.h',
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configuration : {
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'STRING' : '"foo"',
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'INT' : 42,
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'DEFINED' : true,
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'UNDEFINED' : false,
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}
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)
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```
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# A full example
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Generating and using a configuration file requires the following steps:
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- generate the file
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- create an include directory object for the directory that holds the file
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- use it in a target
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We are going to use the traditional approach of generating a header
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file in the top directory. The common name is `config.h` but we're
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going to use an unique name. This avoids the problem of accidentally
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including the wrong header file when building a project with many
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subprojects.
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At the top level we generate the file:
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```meson
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conf_data = configuration_data()
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# Set data
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configure_file(input : 'projconfig.h.in',
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output : 'projconfig.h',
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configuration : conf_data)
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```
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Immediately afterwards we generate the include object.
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```meson
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configuration_inc = include_directories('.')
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```
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Finally we specify this in a target that can be in any subdirectory.
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```meson
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executable(..., include_directories : configuration_inc)
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```
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Now any source file in this target can include the configuration
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header like this:
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```c
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#include<projconfig.h>
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```
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