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# Copyright 2012-2017 The Meson development team
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
import copy, os, re
from collections import OrderedDict
import itertools, pathlib
import hashlib
import pickle
from functools import lru_cache
import typing
from . import environment
from . import dependencies
from . import mlog
from .mesonlib import (
File, MesonException, MachineChoice, PerMachine, OrderedSet, listify,
extract_as_list, typeslistify, stringlistify, classify_unity_sources,
get_filenames_templates_dict, substitute_values, has_path_sep,
)
from .compilers import Compiler, is_object, clink_langs, sort_clink, lang_suffixes
from .linkers import StaticLinker
from .interpreterbase import FeatureNew
pch_kwargs = set(['c_pch', 'cpp_pch'])
lang_arg_kwargs = set([
'c_args',
'cpp_args',
'cuda_args',
'd_args',
'd_import_dirs',
'd_unittest',
'd_module_versions',
'd_debug',
'fortran_args',
'java_args',
'objc_args',
'objcpp_args',
'rust_args',
'vala_args',
'cs_args',
])
vala_kwargs = set(['vala_header', 'vala_gir', 'vala_vapi'])
rust_kwargs = set(['rust_crate_type'])
cs_kwargs = set(['resources', 'cs_args'])
buildtarget_kwargs = set([
'build_by_default',
'build_rpath',
'dependencies',
'extra_files',
'gui_app',
'link_with',
'link_whole',
'link_args',
'link_depends',
'implicit_include_directories',
'include_directories',
'install',
'install_rpath',
'install_dir',
'install_mode',
'name_prefix',
'name_suffix',
'native',
'objects',
'override_options',
'sources',
'gnu_symbol_visibility',
])
known_build_target_kwargs = (
buildtarget_kwargs |
lang_arg_kwargs |
pch_kwargs |
vala_kwargs |
rust_kwargs |
cs_kwargs)
known_exe_kwargs = known_build_target_kwargs | {'implib', 'export_dynamic', 'link_language', 'pie'}
known_shlib_kwargs = known_build_target_kwargs | {'version', 'soversion', 'vs_module_defs', 'darwin_versions'}
known_shmod_kwargs = known_build_target_kwargs | {'vs_module_defs'}
known_stlib_kwargs = known_build_target_kwargs | {'pic'}
known_jar_kwargs = known_exe_kwargs | {'main_class'}
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_target_macos_dylib_install_name(ld) -> str:
name = ['@rpath/', ld.prefix, ld.name]
if ld.soversion is not None:
name.append('.' + ld.soversion)
name.append('.dylib')
return ''.join(name)
class InvalidArguments(MesonException):
pass
class Build:
"""A class that holds the status of one build including
all dependencies and so on.
"""
def __init__(self, environment: environment.Environment):
self.project_name = 'name of master project'
self.project_version = None
self.environment = environment
self.projects = {}
self.targets = OrderedDict()
self.global_args = PerMachine({}, {}) # type: PerMachine[typing.Dict[str, typing.List[str]]]
self.projects_args = PerMachine({}, {}) # type: PerMachine[typing.Dict[str, typing.List[str]]]
self.global_link_args = PerMachine({}, {}) # type: PerMachine[typing.Dict[str, typing.List[str]]]
self.projects_link_args = PerMachine({}, {}) # type: PerMachine[typing.Dict[str, typing.List[str]]]
self.tests = []
self.benchmarks = []
self.headers = []
self.man = []
self.data = []
self.static_linker = PerMachine(None, None) # type: PerMachine[StaticLinker]
self.subprojects = {}
self.subproject_dir = ''
self.install_scripts = []
self.postconf_scripts = []
self.dist_scripts = []
self.install_dirs = []
self.dep_manifest_name = None
self.dep_manifest = {}
self.stdlibs = PerMachine({}, {})
self.test_setups = {} # type: typing.Dict[str, TestSetup]
self.test_setup_default_name = None
self.find_overrides = {}
self.searched_programs = set() # The list of all programs that have been searched for.
def copy(self):
other = Build(self.environment)
for k, v in self.__dict__.items():
if isinstance(v, (list, dict, set, OrderedDict)):
other.__dict__[k] = v.copy()
else:
other.__dict__[k] = v
return other
def merge(self, other):
for k, v in other.__dict__.items():
self.__dict__[k] = v
def ensure_static_linker(self, compiler):
if self.static_linker[compiler.for_machine] is None and compiler.needs_static_linker():
self.static_linker[compiler.for_machine] = self.environment.detect_static_linker(compiler)
def get_project(self):
return self.projects['']
def get_subproject_dir(self):
return self.subproject_dir
def get_targets(self):
return self.targets
def get_tests(self):
return self.tests
def get_benchmarks(self):
return self.benchmarks
def get_headers(self):
return self.headers
def get_man(self):
return self.man
def get_data(self):
return self.data
def get_install_subdirs(self):
return self.install_dirs
def get_global_args(self, compiler, for_machine):
d = self.global_args[for_machine]
return d.get(compiler.get_language(), [])
def get_project_args(self, compiler, project, for_machine):
d = self.projects_args[for_machine]
args = d.get(project)
if not args:
return []
return args.get(compiler.get_language(), [])
def get_global_link_args(self, compiler, for_machine):
d = self.global_link_args[for_machine]
return d.get(compiler.get_language(), [])
def get_project_link_args(self, compiler, project, for_machine):
d = self.projects_link_args[for_machine]
link_args = d.get(project)
if not link_args:
return []
return link_args.get(compiler.get_language(), [])
class IncludeDirs:
def __init__(self, curdir, dirs, is_system, extra_build_dirs=None):
self.curdir = curdir
self.incdirs = dirs
self.is_system = is_system
# Interpreter has validated that all given directories
# actually exist.
if extra_build_dirs is None:
self.extra_build_dirs = []
else:
self.extra_build_dirs = extra_build_dirs
def __repr__(self):
r = '<{} {}/{}>'
return r.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.curdir, self.incdirs)
def get_curdir(self):
return self.curdir
def get_incdirs(self):
return self.incdirs
def get_extra_build_dirs(self):
return self.extra_build_dirs
class ExtractedObjects:
'''
Holds a list of sources for which the objects must be extracted
'''
def __init__(self, target, srclist=None, genlist=None, objlist=None, recursive=True):
self.target = target
self.recursive = recursive
self.srclist = srclist if srclist is not None else []
self.genlist = genlist if genlist is not None else []
self.objlist = objlist if objlist is not None else []
if self.target.is_unity:
self.check_unity_compatible()
def __repr__(self):
r = '<{0} {1!r}: {2}>'
return r.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.target.name, self.srclist)
def classify_all_sources(self, sources, generated_sources):
# Merge sources and generated sources
sources = list(sources)
for gensrc in generated_sources:
for s in gensrc.get_outputs():
# We cannot know the path where this source will be generated,
# but all we need here is the file extension to determine the
# compiler.
sources.append(s)
# Filter out headers and all non-source files
sources = [s for s in sources if environment.is_source(s) and not environment.is_header(s)]
return classify_unity_sources(self.target.compilers.values(), sources)
def check_unity_compatible(self):
# Figure out if the extracted object list is compatible with a Unity
# build. When we're doing a Unified build, we go through the sources,
# and create a single source file from each subset of the sources that
# can be compiled with a specific compiler. Then we create one object
# from each unified source file. So for each compiler we can either
# extra all its sources or none.
cmpsrcs = self.classify_all_sources(self.target.sources, self.target.generated)
extracted_cmpsrcs = self.classify_all_sources(self.srclist, self.genlist)
for comp, srcs in extracted_cmpsrcs.items():
if set(srcs) != set(cmpsrcs[comp]):
raise MesonException('Single object files can not be extracted '
'in Unity builds. You can only extract all '
'the object files for each compiler at once.')
def get_outputs(self, backend):
# TODO: Consider if we need to handle genlist here
return [
backend.object_filename_from_source(self.target, source)
for source in self.srclist
]
class EnvironmentVariables:
def __init__(self):
self.envvars = []
# The set of all env vars we have operations for. Only used for self.has_name()
self.varnames = set()
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0}: {1}>"
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.envvars)
def add_var(self, method, name, args, kwargs):
self.varnames.add(name)
self.envvars.append((method, name, args, kwargs))
def has_name(self, name):
return name in self.varnames
def get_value(self, values, kwargs):
separator = kwargs.get('separator', os.pathsep)
value = ''
for var in values:
value += separator + var
return separator, value.strip(separator)
def set(self, env, name, values, kwargs):
return self.get_value(values, kwargs)[1]
def append(self, env, name, values, kwargs):
sep, value = self.get_value(values, kwargs)
if name in env:
return env[name] + sep + value
return value
def prepend(self, env, name, values, kwargs):
sep, value = self.get_value(values, kwargs)
if name in env:
return value + sep + env[name]
return value
def get_env(self, full_env: typing.Dict[str, str]) -> typing.Dict[str, str]:
env = full_env.copy()
for method, name, values, kwargs in self.envvars:
env[name] = method(full_env, name, values, kwargs)
return env
class Target:
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, build_by_default, for_machine: MachineChoice):
if has_path_sep(name):
# Fix failing test 53 when this becomes an error.
mlog.warning('''Target "%s" has a path separator in its name.
This is not supported, it can cause unexpected failures and will become
a hard error in the future.''' % name)
self.name = name
self.subdir = subdir
self.subproject = subproject
self.build_by_default = build_by_default
self.for_machine = for_machine
self.install = False
self.build_always_stale = False
self.option_overrides = {}
if not hasattr(self, 'typename'):
raise RuntimeError('Target type is not set for target class "{}". This is a bug'.format(type(self).__name__))
def get_install_dir(self, environment):
# Find the installation directory.
default_install_dir = self.get_default_install_dir(environment)
outdirs = self.get_custom_install_dir()
if outdirs[0] is not None and outdirs[0] != default_install_dir and outdirs[0] is not True:
# Either the value is set to a non-default value, or is set to
# False (which means we want this specific output out of many
# outputs to not be installed).
custom_install_dir = True
else:
custom_install_dir = False
outdirs[0] = default_install_dir
return outdirs, custom_install_dir
def get_basename(self):
return self.name
def get_subdir(self):
return self.subdir
def get_typename(self):
return self.typename
@staticmethod
def _get_id_hash(target_id):
# We don't really need cryptographic security here.
# Small-digest hash function with unlikely collision is good enough.
h = hashlib.sha256()
h.update(target_id.encode(encoding='utf-8', errors='replace'))
# This ID should be case-insensitive and should work in Visual Studio,
# e.g. it should not start with leading '-'.
return h.hexdigest()[:7]
@staticmethod
def construct_id_from_path(subdir, name, type_suffix):
"""Construct target ID from subdir, name and type suffix.
This helper function is made public mostly for tests."""
# This ID must also be a valid file name on all OSs.
# It should also avoid shell metacharacters for obvious
# reasons. '@' is not used as often as '_' in source code names.
# In case of collisions consider using checksums.
# FIXME replace with assert when slash in names is prohibited
name_part = name.replace('/', '@').replace('\\', '@')
assert not has_path_sep(type_suffix)
my_id = name_part + type_suffix
if subdir:
subdir_part = Target._get_id_hash(subdir)
# preserve myid for better debuggability
return subdir_part + '@@' + my_id
return my_id
def get_id(self):
return self.construct_id_from_path(
self.subdir, self.name, self.type_suffix())
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs):
if 'build_by_default' in kwargs:
self.build_by_default = kwargs['build_by_default']
if not isinstance(self.build_by_default, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('build_by_default must be a boolean value.')
elif kwargs.get('install', False):
# For backward compatibility, if build_by_default is not explicitly
# set, use the value of 'install' if it's enabled.
self.build_by_default = True
self.option_overrides = self.parse_overrides(kwargs)
def parse_overrides(self, kwargs) -> dict:
result = {}
overrides = stringlistify(kwargs.get('override_options', []))
for o in overrides:
if '=' not in o:
raise InvalidArguments('Overrides must be of form "key=value"')
k, v = o.split('=', 1)
k = k.strip()
v = v.strip()
result[k] = v
return result
def is_linkable_target(self) -> bool:
return False
class BuildTarget(Target):
known_kwargs = known_build_target_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, True, for_machine)
unity_opt = environment.coredata.get_builtin_option('unity')
self.is_unity = unity_opt == 'on' or (unity_opt == 'subprojects' and subproject != '')
self.environment = environment
self.sources = []
self.compilers = OrderedDict() # type: OrderedDict[str, Compiler]
self.objects = []
self.external_deps = []
self.include_dirs = []
self.link_language = kwargs.get('link_language')
self.link_targets = []
self.link_whole_targets = []
self.link_depends = []
self.name_prefix_set = False
self.name_suffix_set = False
self.filename = 'no_name'
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
# The list of all files outputted by this target. Useful in cases such
# as Vala which generates .vapi and .h besides the compiled output.
self.outputs = [self.filename]
self.need_install = False
self.pch = {}
self.extra_args = {}
self.generated = []
self.extra_files = []
self.d_features = {}
self.pic = False
self.pie = False
# Sources can be:
# 1. Pre-existing source files in the source tree
# 2. Pre-existing sources generated by configure_file in the build tree
# 3. Sources files generated by another target or a Generator
self.process_sourcelist(sources)
# Objects can be:
# 1. Pre-existing objects provided by the user with the `objects:` kwarg
# 2. Compiled objects created by and extracted from another target
self.process_objectlist(objects)
self.process_kwargs(kwargs, environment)
self.check_unknown_kwargs(kwargs)
self.process_compilers()
if not any([self.sources, self.generated, self.objects, self.link_whole]):
raise InvalidArguments('Build target %s has no sources.' % name)
self.process_compilers_late()
self.validate_sources()
self.validate_install(environment)
7 years ago
self.check_module_linking()
def __lt__(self, other):
return self.get_id() < other.get_id()
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0} {1}: {2}>"
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.get_id(), self.filename)
def validate_install(self, environment):
if self.for_machine is MachineChoice.BUILD and self.need_install:
if environment.is_cross_build():
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to install a target for the build machine in a cross build.')
else:
mlog.warning('Installing target build for the build machine. This will fail in a cross build.')
def check_unknown_kwargs(self, kwargs):
# Override this method in derived classes that have more
# keywords.
self.check_unknown_kwargs_int(kwargs, self.known_kwargs)
def check_unknown_kwargs_int(self, kwargs, known_kwargs):
unknowns = []
for k in kwargs:
if k not in known_kwargs:
unknowns.append(k)
if len(unknowns) > 0:
mlog.warning('Unknown keyword argument(s) in target %s: %s.' %
(self.name, ', '.join(unknowns)))
def process_objectlist(self, objects):
assert(isinstance(objects, list))
for s in objects:
if hasattr(s, 'held_object'):
s = s.held_object
if isinstance(s, (str, File, ExtractedObjects)):
self.objects.append(s)
elif isinstance(s, (GeneratedList, CustomTarget)):
msg = 'Generated files are not allowed in the \'objects\' kwarg ' + \
'for target {!r}.\nIt is meant only for '.format(self.name) + \
'pre-built object files that are shipped with the\nsource ' + \
'tree. Try adding it in the list of sources.'
raise InvalidArguments(msg)
else:
msg = 'Bad object of type {!r} in target {!r}.'.format(type(s).__name__, self.name)
raise InvalidArguments(msg)
def process_sourcelist(self, sources):
sources = listify(sources)
added_sources = {} # If the same source is defined multiple times, use it only once.
for s in sources:
# Holder unpacking. Ugly.
if hasattr(s, 'held_object'):
s = s.held_object
if isinstance(s, File):
if s not in added_sources:
self.sources.append(s)
added_sources[s] = True
elif isinstance(s, (GeneratedList, CustomTarget, CustomTargetIndex)):
self.generated.append(s)
else:
msg = 'Bad source of type {!r} in target {!r}.'.format(type(s).__name__, self.name)
raise InvalidArguments(msg)
@staticmethod
def can_compile_remove_sources(compiler, sources):
removed = False
for s in sources[:]:
if compiler.can_compile(s):
sources.remove(s)
removed = True
return removed
def process_compilers_late(self):
"""Processes additional compilers after kwargs have been evaluated.
This can add extra compilers that might be required by keyword
arguments, such as link_with or dependencies. It will also try to guess
which compiler to use if one hasn't been selected already.
"""
# Populate list of compilers
compilers = self.environment.coredata.compilers[self.for_machine]
# did user override clink_langs for this target?
link_langs = [self.link_language] if self.link_language else clink_langs
# If this library is linked against another library we need to consider
# the languages of those libraries as well.
if self.link_targets or self.link_whole_targets:
extra = set()
for t in itertools.chain(self.link_targets, self.link_whole_targets):
if isinstance(t, CustomTarget) or isinstance(t, CustomTargetIndex):
continue # We can't know anything about these.
for name, compiler in t.compilers.items():
if name in link_langs:
extra.add((name, compiler))
for name, compiler in sorted(extra, key=lambda p: sort_clink(p[0])):
self.compilers[name] = compiler
if not self.compilers:
# No source files or parent targets, target consists of only object
# files of unknown origin. Just add the first clink compiler
# that we have and hope that it can link these objects
for lang in link_langs:
if lang in compilers:
self.compilers[lang] = compilers[lang]
break
def process_compilers(self):
'''
Populate self.compilers, which is the list of compilers that this
target will use for compiling all its sources.
We also add compilers that were used by extracted objects to simplify
dynamic linker determination.
'''
if not self.sources and not self.generated and not self.objects:
return
# Populate list of compilers
compilers = self.environment.coredata.compilers[self.for_machine]
# Pre-existing sources
sources = list(self.sources)
# All generated sources
for gensrc in self.generated:
for s in gensrc.get_outputs():
# Generated objects can't be compiled, so don't use them for
# compiler detection. If our target only has generated objects,
# we will fall back to using the first c-like compiler we find,
# which is what we need.
if not is_object(s):
sources.append(s)
for d in self.external_deps:
if hasattr(d, 'held_object'):
d = d.held_object
for s in d.sources:
if isinstance(s, (str, File)):
sources.append(s)
# Sources that were used to create our extracted objects
for o in self.objects:
if not isinstance(o, ExtractedObjects):
continue
for s in o.srclist:
# Don't add Vala sources since that will pull in the Vala
# compiler even though we will never use it since we are
# dealing with compiled C code.
if not s.endswith(lang_suffixes['vala']):
sources.append(s)
if sources:
# For each source, try to add one compiler that can compile it.
# It's ok if no compilers can do so, because users are expected to
# be able to add arbitrary non-source files to the sources list.
for s in sources:
for lang, compiler in compilers.items():
if compiler.can_compile(s):
if lang not in self.compilers:
self.compilers[lang] = compiler
break
# Re-sort according to clink_langs
self.compilers = OrderedDict(sorted(self.compilers.items(),
key=lambda t: sort_clink(t[0])))
# If all our sources are Vala, our target also needs the C compiler but
# it won't get added above.
if 'vala' in self.compilers and 'c' not in self.compilers:
self.compilers['c'] = compilers['c']
def validate_sources(self):
if not self.sources:
return
for lang in ('cs', 'java'):
if lang in self.compilers:
check_sources = list(self.sources)
compiler = self.compilers[lang]
if not self.can_compile_remove_sources(compiler, check_sources):
m = 'No {} sources found in target {!r}'.format(lang, self.name)
raise InvalidArguments(m)
if check_sources:
m = '{0} targets can only contain {0} files:\n'.format(lang.capitalize())
m += '\n'.join([repr(c) for c in check_sources])
raise InvalidArguments(m)
# CSharp and Java targets can't contain any other file types
assert(len(self.compilers) == 1)
return
def process_link_depends(self, sources, environment):
"""Process the link_depends keyword argument.
This is designed to handle strings, Files, and the output of Custom
Targets. Notably it doesn't handle generator() returned objects, since
adding them as a link depends would inherently cause them to be
generated twice, since the output needs to be passed to the ld_args and
link_depends.
"""
sources = listify(sources)
for s in sources:
if hasattr(s, 'held_object'):
s = s.held_object
if isinstance(s, File):
self.link_depends.append(s)
elif isinstance(s, str):
self.link_depends.append(
File.from_source_file(environment.source_dir, self.subdir, s))
elif hasattr(s, 'get_outputs'):
self.link_depends.extend(
[File.from_built_file(s.subdir, p) for p in s.get_outputs()])
else:
raise InvalidArguments(
'Link_depends arguments must be strings, Files, '
'or a Custom Target, or lists thereof.')
def get_original_kwargs(self):
return self.kwargs
def unpack_holder(self, d):
d = listify(d)
newd = []
for i in d:
if isinstance(i, list):
i = self.unpack_holder(i)
elif hasattr(i, 'held_object'):
i = i.held_object
for t in ['dependencies', 'link_with', 'include_directories', 'sources']:
if hasattr(i, t):
setattr(i, t, self.unpack_holder(getattr(i, t)))
newd.append(i)
return newd
def copy_kwargs(self, kwargs):
self.kwargs = copy.copy(kwargs)
# This sucks quite badly. Arguments
# are holders but they can't be pickled
# so unpack those known.
for k, v in self.kwargs.items():
if isinstance(v, list):
self.kwargs[k] = self.unpack_holder(v)
if hasattr(v, 'held_object'):
self.kwargs[k] = v.held_object
for t in ['dependencies', 'link_with', 'include_directories', 'sources']:
if t in self.kwargs:
self.kwargs[t] = self.unpack_holder(self.kwargs[t])
def extract_objects(self, srclist):
obj_src = []
for src in srclist:
if isinstance(src, str):
src = File(False, self.subdir, src)
elif isinstance(src, File):
FeatureNew('File argument for extract_objects', '0.50.0').use(self.subproject)
else:
raise MesonException('Object extraction arguments must be strings or Files.')
# FIXME: It could be a generated source
if src not in self.sources:
raise MesonException('Tried to extract unknown source %s.' % src)
obj_src.append(src)
return ExtractedObjects(self, obj_src)
def extract_all_objects(self, recursive=True):
return ExtractedObjects(self, self.sources, self.generated, self.objects,
recursive)
def get_all_link_deps(self):
return self.get_transitive_link_deps()
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_transitive_link_deps(self):
result = []
for i in self.link_targets:
result += i.get_all_link_deps()
return result
def get_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
return self.get_transitive_link_deps_mapping(prefix, environment)
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_transitive_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
result = {}
for i in self.link_targets:
mapping = i.get_link_deps_mapping(prefix, environment)
#we are merging two dictionaries, while keeping the earlier one dominant
result_tmp = mapping.copy()
result_tmp.update(result)
result = result_tmp
return result
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def get_link_dep_subdirs(self):
result = OrderedSet()
for i in self.link_targets:
result.add(i.get_subdir())
result.update(i.get_link_dep_subdirs())
return result
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return environment.get_libdir()
def get_custom_install_dir(self):
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
return self.install_dir
def get_custom_install_mode(self):
return self.install_mode
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs, environment):
super().process_kwargs(kwargs)
self.copy_kwargs(kwargs)
kwargs.get('modules', [])
self.need_install = kwargs.get('install', self.need_install)
llist = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'link_with')
for linktarget in llist:
# Sorry for this hack. Keyword targets are kept in holders
# in kwargs. Unpack here without looking at the exact type.
if hasattr(linktarget, "held_object"):
linktarget = linktarget.held_object
if isinstance(linktarget, dependencies.ExternalLibrary):
raise MesonException('''An external library was used in link_with keyword argument, which
is reserved for libraries built as part of this project. External
libraries must be passed using the dependencies keyword argument
instead, because they are conceptually "external dependencies",
just like those detected with the dependency() function.''')
self.link(linktarget)
lwhole = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'link_whole')
for linktarget in lwhole:
self.link_whole(linktarget)
c_pchlist, cpp_pchlist, clist, cpplist, cudalist, cslist, valalist, objclist, objcpplist, fortranlist, rustlist \
= extract_as_list(kwargs, 'c_pch', 'cpp_pch', 'c_args', 'cpp_args', 'cuda_args', 'cs_args', 'vala_args', 'objc_args',
'objcpp_args', 'fortran_args', 'rust_args')
self.add_pch('c', c_pchlist)
self.add_pch('cpp', cpp_pchlist)
compiler_args = {'c': clist, 'cpp': cpplist, 'cuda': cudalist, 'cs': cslist, 'vala': valalist, 'objc': objclist, 'objcpp': objcpplist,
'fortran': fortranlist, 'rust': rustlist
}
for key, value in compiler_args.items():
self.add_compiler_args(key, value)
if not isinstance(self, Executable) or 'export_dynamic' in kwargs:
self.vala_header = kwargs.get('vala_header', self.name + '.h')
self.vala_vapi = kwargs.get('vala_vapi', self.name + '.vapi')
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.vala_gir = kwargs.get('vala_gir', None)
dlist = stringlistify(kwargs.get('d_args', []))
self.add_compiler_args('d', dlist)
dfeatures = dict()
dfeature_unittest = kwargs.get('d_unittest', False)
if dfeature_unittest:
dfeatures['unittest'] = dfeature_unittest
dfeature_versions = kwargs.get('d_module_versions', [])
if dfeature_versions:
dfeatures['versions'] = dfeature_versions
dfeature_debug = kwargs.get('d_debug', [])
if dfeature_debug:
dfeatures['debug'] = dfeature_debug
if 'd_import_dirs' in kwargs:
dfeature_import_dirs = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'd_import_dirs', unholder=True)
for d in dfeature_import_dirs:
if not isinstance(d, IncludeDirs):
raise InvalidArguments('Arguments to d_import_dirs must be include_directories.')
dfeatures['import_dirs'] = dfeature_import_dirs
if dfeatures:
self.d_features = dfeatures
self.link_args = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'link_args')
for i in self.link_args:
if not isinstance(i, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Link_args arguments must be strings.')
for l in self.link_args:
if '-Wl,-rpath' in l or l.startswith('-rpath'):
mlog.warning('''Please do not define rpath with a linker argument, use install_rpath or build_rpath properties instead.
This will become a hard error in a future Meson release.''')
self.process_link_depends(kwargs.get('link_depends', []), environment)
# Target-specific include dirs must be added BEFORE include dirs from
# internal deps (added inside self.add_deps()) to override them.
inclist = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'include_directories')
self.add_include_dirs(inclist)
# Add dependencies (which also have include_directories)
deplist = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'dependencies')
self.add_deps(deplist)
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
# If an item in this list is False, the output corresponding to
# the list index of that item will not be installed
self.install_dir = typeslistify(kwargs.get('install_dir', [None]),
(str, bool))
self.install_mode = kwargs.get('install_mode', None)
main_class = kwargs.get('main_class', '')
if not isinstance(main_class, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Main class must be a string')
self.main_class = main_class
if isinstance(self, Executable):
self.gui_app = kwargs.get('gui_app', False)
if not isinstance(self.gui_app, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('Argument gui_app must be boolean.')
elif 'gui_app' in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('Argument gui_app can only be used on executables.')
extra_files = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'extra_files')
for i in extra_files:
assert(isinstance(i, File))
trial = os.path.join(environment.get_source_dir(), i.subdir, i.fname)
if not(os.path.isfile(trial)):
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to add non-existing extra file %s.' % i)
self.extra_files = extra_files
self.install_rpath = kwargs.get('install_rpath', '')
if not isinstance(self.install_rpath, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Install_rpath is not a string.')
self.build_rpath = kwargs.get('build_rpath', '')
if not isinstance(self.build_rpath, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Build_rpath is not a string.')
resources = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'resources')
for r in resources:
if not isinstance(r, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Resource argument is not a string.')
trial = os.path.join(environment.get_source_dir(), self.subdir, r)
if not os.path.isfile(trial):
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to add non-existing resource %s.' % r)
self.resources = resources
if 'name_prefix' in kwargs:
name_prefix = kwargs['name_prefix']
if isinstance(name_prefix, list):
if name_prefix:
raise InvalidArguments('name_prefix array must be empty to signify null.')
elif not isinstance(name_prefix, str):
raise InvalidArguments('name_prefix must be a string.')
self.prefix = name_prefix
self.name_prefix_set = True
if 'name_suffix' in kwargs:
name_suffix = kwargs['name_suffix']
if isinstance(name_suffix, list):
if name_suffix:
raise InvalidArguments('name_suffix array must be empty to signify null.')
9 years ago
else:
if not isinstance(name_suffix, str):
raise InvalidArguments('name_suffix must be a string.')
if name_suffix == '':
raise InvalidArguments('name_suffix should not be an empty string. '
'If you want meson to use the default behaviour '
'for each platform pass `[]` (empty array)')
9 years ago
self.suffix = name_suffix
self.name_suffix_set = True
if isinstance(self, StaticLibrary):
# You can't disable PIC on OS X. The compiler ignores -fno-PIC.
# PIC is always on for Windows (all code is position-independent
# since library loading is done differently)
m = self.environment.machines[self.for_machine]
if m.is_darwin() or m.is_windows():
self.pic = True
else:
self.pic = self._extract_pic_pie(kwargs, 'pic')
if isinstance(self, Executable):
# Executables must be PIE on Android
if self.environment.machines[self.for_machine].is_android():
self.pie = True
else:
self.pie = self._extract_pic_pie(kwargs, 'pie')
self.implicit_include_directories = kwargs.get('implicit_include_directories', True)
if not isinstance(self.implicit_include_directories, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('Implicit_include_directories must be a boolean.')
self.gnu_symbol_visibility = kwargs.get('gnu_symbol_visibility', '')
if not isinstance(self.gnu_symbol_visibility, str):
raise InvalidArguments('GNU symbol visibility must be a string.')
if self.gnu_symbol_visibility != '':
permitted = ['default', 'internal', 'hidden', 'protected', 'inlineshidden']
if self.gnu_symbol_visibility not in permitted:
raise InvalidArguments('GNU symbol visibility arg %s not one of: %s',
self.symbol_visibility, ', '.join(permitted))
def _extract_pic_pie(self, kwargs, arg):
# Check if we have -fPIC, -fpic, -fPIE, or -fpie in cflags
all_flags = self.extra_args['c'] + self.extra_args['cpp']
if '-f' + arg.lower() in all_flags or '-f' + arg.upper() in all_flags:
mlog.warning("Use the '{}' kwarg instead of passing '{}' manually to {!r}".format(arg, '-f' + arg, self.name))
return True
val = kwargs.get(arg, False)
if not isinstance(val, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('Argument {} to {!r} must be boolean'.format(arg, self.name))
return val
def get_filename(self):
return self.filename
def get_outputs(self):
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
return self.outputs
def get_extra_args(self, language):
return self.extra_args.get(language, [])
def get_dependencies(self, exclude=None, internal=True):
transitive_deps = []
if exclude is None:
exclude = []
if internal:
link_targets = itertools.chain(self.link_targets, self.link_whole_targets)
else:
# We don't want the 'internal' libraries when generating the
# `Libs:` and `Libs.private:` lists in pkg-config files.
link_targets = self.link_targets
for t in link_targets:
if t in transitive_deps or t in exclude:
continue
transitive_deps.append(t)
if isinstance(t, StaticLibrary):
transitive_deps += t.get_dependencies(transitive_deps + exclude, internal)
return transitive_deps
def get_source_subdir(self):
return self.subdir
def get_sources(self):
return self.sources
def get_objects(self):
return self.objects
def get_generated_sources(self):
return self.generated
def should_install(self):
return self.need_install
def has_pch(self):
return len(self.pch) > 0
def get_pch(self, language):
try:
return self.pch[language]
except KeyError:
return[]
def get_include_dirs(self):
return self.include_dirs
def add_deps(self, deps):
deps = listify(deps)
for dep in deps:
if hasattr(dep, 'held_object'):
dep = dep.held_object
if isinstance(dep, dependencies.InternalDependency):
# Those parts that are internal.
self.process_sourcelist(dep.sources)
self.add_include_dirs(dep.include_directories)
for l in dep.libraries:
self.link(l)
for l in dep.whole_libraries:
self.link_whole(l)
if dep.compile_args or dep.link_args:
# Those parts that are external.
extpart = dependencies.InternalDependency('undefined',
[],
dep.compile_args,
dep.link_args,
[], [], [], [])
self.external_deps.append(extpart)
# Deps of deps.
self.add_deps(dep.ext_deps)
elif isinstance(dep, dependencies.Dependency):
if dep not in self.external_deps:
self.external_deps.append(dep)
self.process_sourcelist(dep.get_sources())
self.add_deps(dep.ext_deps)
elif isinstance(dep, BuildTarget):
raise InvalidArguments('''Tried to use a build target as a dependency.
You probably should put it in link_with instead.''')
else:
# This is a bit of a hack. We do not want Build to know anything
# about the interpreter so we can't import it and use isinstance.
# This should be reliable enough.
if hasattr(dep, 'project_args_frozen') or hasattr(dep, 'global_args_frozen'):
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to use subproject object as a dependency.\n'
'You probably wanted to use a dependency declared in it instead.\n'
'Access it by calling get_variable() on the subproject object.')
raise InvalidArguments('Argument is of an unacceptable type {!r}.\nMust be '
'either an external dependency (returned by find_library() or '
'dependency()) or an internal dependency (returned by '
'declare_dependency()).'.format(type(dep).__name__))
def get_external_deps(self):
return self.external_deps
def link(self, target):
for t in listify(target, unholder=True):
if not isinstance(t, (Target, CustomTargetIndex)):
raise InvalidArguments('{!r} is not a target.'.format(t))
if not t.is_linkable_target():
raise InvalidArguments('Link target {!r} is not linkable.'.format(t))
if isinstance(self, SharedLibrary) and isinstance(t, StaticLibrary) and not t.pic:
msg = "Can't link non-PIC static library {!r} into shared library {!r}. ".format(t.name, self.name)
msg += "Use the 'pic' option to static_library to build with PIC."
raise InvalidArguments(msg)
if self.for_machine is not t.for_machine:
msg = 'Tried to mix libraries for machines {} and {} in target {!r}'.format(self.for_machine, t.for_machine, self.name)
if self.environment.is_cross_build():
raise InvalidArguments(msg + ' This is not possible in a cross build.')
else:
mlog.warning(msg + ' This will fail in cross build.')
self.link_targets.append(t)
def link_whole(self, target):
for t in listify(target, unholder=True):
if isinstance(t, (CustomTarget, CustomTargetIndex)):
if not t.is_linkable_target():
raise InvalidArguments('Custom target {!r} is not linkable.'.format(t))
if not t.get_filename().endswith('.a'):
raise InvalidArguments('Can only link_whole custom targets that are .a archives.')
elif not isinstance(t, StaticLibrary):
raise InvalidArguments('{!r} is not a static library.'.format(t))
if isinstance(self, SharedLibrary) and not t.pic:
msg = "Can't link non-PIC static library {!r} into shared library {!r}. ".format(t.name, self.name)
msg += "Use the 'pic' option to static_library to build with PIC."
raise InvalidArguments(msg)
if self.for_machine is not t.for_machine:
msg = 'Tried to mix libraries for machines {1} and {2} in target {!r}'.format(self.name, self.for_machine, t.for_machine)
if self.environment.is_cross_build():
raise InvalidArguments(msg + ' This is not possible in a cross build.')
else:
mlog.warning(msg + ' This will fail in cross build.')
self.link_whole_targets.append(t)
def add_pch(self, language, pchlist):
if not pchlist:
return
elif len(pchlist) == 1:
if not environment.is_header(pchlist[0]):
raise InvalidArguments('PCH argument %s is not a header.' % pchlist[0])
elif len(pchlist) == 2:
if environment.is_header(pchlist[0]):
if not environment.is_source(pchlist[1]):
raise InvalidArguments('PCH definition must contain one header and at most one source.')
elif environment.is_source(pchlist[0]):
if not environment.is_header(pchlist[1]):
raise InvalidArguments('PCH definition must contain one header and at most one source.')
pchlist = [pchlist[1], pchlist[0]]
else:
raise InvalidArguments('PCH argument %s is of unknown type.' % pchlist[0])
if (os.path.dirname(pchlist[0]) != os.path.dirname(pchlist[1])):
raise InvalidArguments('PCH files must be stored in the same folder.')
mlog.warning('PCH source files are deprecated, only a single header file should be used.')
elif len(pchlist) > 2:
raise InvalidArguments('PCH definition may have a maximum of 2 files.')
for f in pchlist:
if not isinstance(f, str):
raise MesonException('PCH arguments must be strings.')
if not os.path.isfile(os.path.join(self.environment.source_dir, self.subdir, f)):
raise MesonException('File %s does not exist.' % f)
self.pch[language] = pchlist
def add_include_dirs(self, args):
ids = []
for a in args:
# FIXME same hack, forcibly unpack from holder.
if hasattr(a, 'held_object'):
a = a.held_object
if not isinstance(a, IncludeDirs):
raise InvalidArguments('Include directory to be added is not an include directory object.')
ids.append(a)
self.include_dirs += ids
def add_compiler_args(self, language, args):
args = listify(args)
for a in args:
if not isinstance(a, (str, File)):
raise InvalidArguments('A non-string passed to compiler args.')
if language in self.extra_args:
self.extra_args[language] += args
else:
self.extra_args[language] = args
def get_aliases(self):
return {}
def get_langs_used_by_deps(self) -> typing.List[str]:
'''
Sometimes you want to link to a C++ library that exports C API, which
means the linker must link in the C++ stdlib, and we must use a C++
compiler for linking. The same is also applicable for objc/objc++, etc,
so we can keep using clink_langs for the priority order.
See: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1653
'''
langs = []
# User specified link_language of target (for multi-language targets)
if self.link_language:
return [self.link_language]
# Check if any of the external libraries were written in this language
for dep in self.external_deps:
if dep.language is None:
continue
if dep.language not in langs:
langs.append(dep.language)
# Check if any of the internal libraries this target links to were
# written in this language
for link_target in itertools.chain(self.link_targets, self.link_whole_targets):
if isinstance(link_target, (CustomTarget, CustomTargetIndex)):
continue
for language in link_target.compilers:
if language not in langs:
langs.append(language)
return langs
def get_clink_dynamic_linker_and_stdlibs(self):
'''
We use the order of languages in `clink_langs` to determine which
linker to use in case the target has sources compiled with multiple
compilers. All languages other than those in this list have their own
linker.
Note that Vala outputs C code, so Vala sources can use any linker
that can link compiled C. We don't actually need to add an exception
for Vala here because of that.
'''
# Populate list of all compilers, not just those being used to compile
# sources in this target
all_compilers = self.environment.coredata.compilers[self.for_machine]
# Languages used by dependencies
dep_langs = self.get_langs_used_by_deps()
# Pick a compiler based on the language priority-order
for l in clink_langs:
if l in self.compilers or l in dep_langs:
try:
linker = all_compilers[l]
except KeyError:
raise MesonException(
'Could not get a dynamic linker for build target {!r}. '
'Requires a linker for language "{}", but that is not '
'a project language.'.format(self.name, l))
stdlib_args = []
added_languages = set()
for dl in itertools.chain(self.compilers, dep_langs):
if dl != linker.language:
stdlib_args += all_compilers[dl].language_stdlib_only_link_flags()
added_languages.add(dl)
return linker, stdlib_args
m = 'Could not get a dynamic linker for build target {!r}'
raise AssertionError(m.format(self.name))
def get_using_rustc(self):
if len(self.sources) > 0 and self.sources[0].fname.endswith('.rs'):
return True
def get_using_msvc(self):
'''
Check if the dynamic linker is MSVC. Used by Executable, StaticLibrary,
and SharedLibrary for deciding when to use MSVC-specific file naming
and debug filenames.
If at least some code is built with MSVC and the final library is
linked with MSVC, we can be sure that some debug info will be
generated. We only check the dynamic linker here because the static
linker is guaranteed to be of the same type.
Interesting cases:
1. The Vala compiler outputs C code to be compiled by whatever
C compiler we're using, so all objects will still be created by the
MSVC compiler.
2. If the target contains only objects, process_compilers guesses and
picks the first compiler that smells right.
'''
linker, _ = self.get_clink_dynamic_linker_and_stdlibs()
# Mixing many languages with MSVC is not supported yet so ignore stdlibs.
if linker and linker.get_id() in {'msvc', 'clang-cl', 'intel-cl', 'llvm', 'dmd', 'nvcc'}:
return True
return False
7 years ago
def check_module_linking(self):
'''
Warn if shared modules are linked with target: (link_with) #2865
'''
for link_target in self.link_targets:
if isinstance(link_target, SharedModule):
if self.environment.machines[self.for_machine].is_darwin():
raise MesonException('''target links against shared modules.
This is not permitted on OSX''')
else:
mlog.warning('''target links against shared modules. This is not
recommended as it is not supported on some platforms''')
return
class Generator:
def __init__(self, args, kwargs):
if len(args) != 1:
raise InvalidArguments('Generator requires exactly one positional argument: the executable')
exe = args[0]
if hasattr(exe, 'held_object'):
exe = exe.held_object
if not isinstance(exe, (Executable, dependencies.ExternalProgram)):
raise InvalidArguments('First generator argument must be an executable.')
self.exe = exe
self.depfile = None
self.capture = False
self.depends = []
self.process_kwargs(kwargs)
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0}: {1}>"
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.exe)
def get_exe(self):
return self.exe
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs):
if 'arguments' not in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('Generator must have "arguments" keyword argument.')
args = kwargs['arguments']
if isinstance(args, str):
args = [args]
if not isinstance(args, list):
raise InvalidArguments('"Arguments" keyword argument must be a string or a list of strings.')
for a in args:
if not isinstance(a, str):
raise InvalidArguments('A non-string object in "arguments" keyword argument.')
self.arglist = args
if 'output' not in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('Generator must have "output" keyword argument.')
outputs = listify(kwargs['output'])
for rule in outputs:
if not isinstance(rule, str):
raise InvalidArguments('"output" may only contain strings.')
if '@BASENAME@' not in rule and '@PLAINNAME@' not in rule:
raise InvalidArguments('Every element of "output" must contain @BASENAME@ or @PLAINNAME@.')
if has_path_sep(rule):
raise InvalidArguments('"outputs" must not contain a directory separator.')
11 years ago
if len(outputs) > 1:
for o in outputs:
if '@OUTPUT@' in o:
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to use @OUTPUT@ in a rule with more than one output.')
self.outputs = outputs
if 'depfile' in kwargs:
depfile = kwargs['depfile']
if not isinstance(depfile, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Depfile must be a string.')
if os.path.basename(depfile) != depfile:
raise InvalidArguments('Depfile must be a plain filename without a subdirectory.')
self.depfile = depfile
if 'capture' in kwargs:
capture = kwargs['capture']
if not isinstance(capture, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('Capture must be boolean.')
self.capture = capture
if 'depends' in kwargs:
depends = listify(kwargs['depends'], unholder=True)
for d in depends:
if not isinstance(d, BuildTarget):
raise InvalidArguments('Depends entries must be build targets.')
self.depends.append(d)
def get_base_outnames(self, inname):
plainname = os.path.basename(inname)
basename = os.path.splitext(plainname)[0]
bases = [x.replace('@BASENAME@', basename).replace('@PLAINNAME@', plainname) for x in self.outputs]
return bases
def get_dep_outname(self, inname):
if self.depfile is None:
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to get dep name for rule that does not have dependency file defined.')
plainname = os.path.basename(inname)
basename = os.path.splitext(plainname)[0]
return self.depfile.replace('@BASENAME@', basename).replace('@PLAINNAME@', plainname)
def get_arglist(self, inname):
plainname = os.path.basename(inname)
basename = os.path.splitext(plainname)[0]
return [x.replace('@BASENAME@', basename).replace('@PLAINNAME@', plainname) for x in self.arglist]
def is_parent_path(self, parent, trial):
relpath = pathlib.PurePath(trial).relative_to(parent)
return relpath.parts[0] != '..' # For subdirs we can only go "down".
def process_files(self, name, files, state, preserve_path_from=None, extra_args=None):
output = GeneratedList(self, state.subdir, preserve_path_from, extra_args=extra_args if extra_args is not None else [])
for f in files:
if isinstance(f, str):
f = File.from_source_file(state.environment.source_dir, state.subdir, f)
elif not isinstance(f, File):
raise InvalidArguments('{} arguments must be strings or files not {!r}.'.format(name, f))
if preserve_path_from:
abs_f = f.absolute_path(state.environment.source_dir, state.environment.build_dir)
if not self.is_parent_path(preserve_path_from, abs_f):
raise InvalidArguments('When using preserve_path_from, all input files must be in a subdirectory of the given dir.')
output.add_file(f, state)
return output
class GeneratedList:
def __init__(self, generator, subdir, preserve_path_from=None, extra_args=None):
if hasattr(generator, 'held_object'):
generator = generator.held_object
self.generator = generator
self.name = self.generator.exe
self.subdir = subdir
self.infilelist = []
self.outfilelist = []
self.outmap = {}
self.extra_depends = []
self.depend_files = []
self.preserve_path_from = preserve_path_from
self.extra_args = extra_args if extra_args is not None else []
if isinstance(generator.exe, dependencies.ExternalProgram):
if not generator.exe.found():
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to use not-found external program as generator')
path = generator.exe.get_path()
if os.path.isabs(path):
# Can only add a dependency on an external program which we
# know the absolute path of
self.depend_files.append(File.from_absolute_file(path))
def add_preserved_path_segment(self, infile, outfiles, state):
result = []
in_abs = infile.absolute_path(state.environment.source_dir, state.environment.build_dir)
assert(os.path.isabs(self.preserve_path_from))
rel = os.path.relpath(in_abs, self.preserve_path_from)
path_segment = os.path.dirname(rel)
for of in outfiles:
result.append(os.path.join(path_segment, of))
return result
def add_file(self, newfile, state):
self.infilelist.append(newfile)
outfiles = self.generator.get_base_outnames(newfile.fname)
if self.preserve_path_from:
outfiles = self.add_preserved_path_segment(newfile, outfiles, state)
self.outfilelist += outfiles
self.outmap[newfile] = outfiles
def get_inputs(self):
return self.infilelist
def get_outputs(self):
return self.outfilelist
def get_outputs_for(self, filename):
return self.outmap[filename]
def get_generator(self):
return self.generator
def get_extra_args(self):
return self.extra_args
class Executable(BuildTarget):
known_kwargs = known_exe_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
self.typename = 'executable'
if 'pie' not in kwargs and 'b_pie' in environment.coredata.base_options:
kwargs['pie'] = environment.coredata.base_options['b_pie'].value
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, for_machine, sources, objects, environment, kwargs)
# Unless overridden, executables have no suffix or prefix. Except on
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# Windows and with C#/Mono executables where the suffix is 'exe'
if not hasattr(self, 'prefix'):
self.prefix = ''
if not hasattr(self, 'suffix'):
machine = environment.machines[for_machine]
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# Executable for Windows or C#/Mono
if machine.is_windows() or machine.is_cygwin() or 'cs' in self.compilers:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.suffix = 'exe'
elif machine.system.startswith('wasm') or machine.system == 'emscripten':
self.suffix = 'js'
elif ('c' in self.compilers and self.compilers['c'].get_id().startswith('arm') or
'cpp' in self.compilers and self.compilers['cpp'].get_id().startswith('arm')):
self.suffix = 'axf'
elif ('c' in self.compilers and self.compilers['c'].get_id().startswith('ccrx') or
'cpp' in self.compilers and self.compilers['cpp'].get_id().startswith('ccrx')):
self.suffix = 'abs'
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
else:
self.suffix = environment.machines[for_machine].get_exe_suffix()
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.filename = self.name
if self.suffix:
self.filename += '.' + self.suffix
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.outputs = [self.filename]
# The import library this target will generate
self.import_filename = None
# The import library that Visual Studio would generate (and accept)
self.vs_import_filename = None
# The import library that GCC would generate (and prefer)
self.gcc_import_filename = None
# Check for export_dynamic
self.export_dynamic = False
if kwargs.get('export_dynamic'):
if not isinstance(kwargs['export_dynamic'], bool):
raise InvalidArguments('"export_dynamic" keyword argument must be a boolean')
self.export_dynamic = True
if kwargs.get('implib'):
self.export_dynamic = True
if self.export_dynamic and kwargs.get('implib') is False:
raise InvalidArguments('"implib" keyword argument must not be false for if "export_dynamic" is true')
# If using export_dynamic, set the import library name
if self.export_dynamic:
implib_basename = self.name + '.exe'
if not isinstance(kwargs.get('implib', False), bool):
implib_basename = kwargs['implib']
m = environment.machines[for_machine]
if m.is_windows() or m.is_cygwin():
self.vs_import_filename = '{0}.lib'.format(implib_basename)
self.gcc_import_filename = 'lib{0}.a'.format(implib_basename)
if self.get_using_msvc():
self.import_filename = self.vs_import_filename
else:
self.import_filename = self.gcc_import_filename
# Only linkwithable if using export_dynamic
self.is_linkwithable = self.export_dynamic
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return environment.get_bindir()
def description(self):
'''Human friendly description of the executable'''
return self.name
def type_suffix(self):
return "@exe"
def get_import_filename(self):
"""
The name of the import library that will be outputted by the compiler
Returns None if there is no import library required for this platform
"""
return self.import_filename
def get_import_filenameslist(self):
if self.import_filename:
return [self.vs_import_filename, self.gcc_import_filename]
return []
def is_linkable_target(self):
return self.is_linkwithable
class StaticLibrary(BuildTarget):
known_kwargs = known_stlib_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
self.typename = 'static library'
if 'pic' not in kwargs and 'b_staticpic' in environment.coredata.base_options:
kwargs['pic'] = environment.coredata.base_options['b_staticpic'].value
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, for_machine, sources, objects, environment, kwargs)
if 'cs' in self.compilers:
raise InvalidArguments('Static libraries not supported for C#.')
if 'rust' in self.compilers:
# If no crate type is specified, or it's the generic lib type, use rlib
if not hasattr(self, 'rust_crate_type') or self.rust_crate_type == 'lib':
mlog.debug('Defaulting Rust static library target crate type to rlib')
self.rust_crate_type = 'rlib'
# Don't let configuration proceed with a non-static crate type
elif self.rust_crate_type not in ['rlib', 'staticlib']:
raise InvalidArguments('Crate type "{0}" invalid for static libraries; must be "rlib" or "staticlib"'.format(self.rust_crate_type))
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# By default a static library is named libfoo.a even on Windows because
# MSVC does not have a consistent convention for what static libraries
# are called. The MSVC CRT uses libfoo.lib syntax but nothing else uses
# it and GCC only looks for static libraries called foo.lib and
# libfoo.a. However, we cannot use foo.lib because that's the same as
# the import library. Using libfoo.a is ok because people using MSVC
# always pass the library filename while linking anyway.
if not hasattr(self, 'prefix'):
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.prefix = 'lib'
if not hasattr(self, 'suffix'):
if 'rust' in self.compilers:
if not hasattr(self, 'rust_crate_type') or self.rust_crate_type == 'rlib':
# default Rust static library suffix
self.suffix = 'rlib'
elif self.rust_crate_type == 'staticlib':
self.suffix = 'a'
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
else:
self.suffix = 'a'
self.filename = self.prefix + self.name + '.' + self.suffix
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.outputs = [self.filename]
def get_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
return {}
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return environment.get_static_lib_dir()
def type_suffix(self):
return "@sta"
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs, environment):
super().process_kwargs(kwargs, environment)
if 'rust_crate_type' in kwargs:
rust_crate_type = kwargs['rust_crate_type']
if isinstance(rust_crate_type, str):
self.rust_crate_type = rust_crate_type
else:
raise InvalidArguments('Invalid rust_crate_type "{0}": must be a string.'.format(rust_crate_type))
def is_linkable_target(self):
return True
class SharedLibrary(BuildTarget):
known_kwargs = known_shlib_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
self.typename = 'shared library'
self.soversion = None
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.ltversion = None
# Max length 2, first element is compatibility_version, second is current_version
self.darwin_versions = []
self.vs_module_defs = None
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# The import library this target will generate
self.import_filename = None
# The import library that Visual Studio would generate (and accept)
self.vs_import_filename = None
# The import library that GCC would generate (and prefer)
self.gcc_import_filename = None
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, for_machine, sources, objects, environment, kwargs)
if 'rust' in self.compilers:
# If no crate type is specified, or it's the generic lib type, use dylib
if not hasattr(self, 'rust_crate_type') or self.rust_crate_type == 'lib':
mlog.debug('Defaulting Rust dynamic library target crate type to "dylib"')
self.rust_crate_type = 'dylib'
# Don't let configuration proceed with a non-dynamic crate type
elif self.rust_crate_type not in ['dylib', 'cdylib']:
raise InvalidArguments('Crate type "{0}" invalid for dynamic libraries; must be "dylib" or "cdylib"'.format(self.rust_crate_type))
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
if not hasattr(self, 'prefix'):
self.prefix = None
if not hasattr(self, 'suffix'):
self.suffix = None
self.basic_filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
self.determine_filenames(environment)
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
def get_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
result = {}
mappings = self.get_transitive_link_deps_mapping(prefix, environment)
old = get_target_macos_dylib_install_name(self)
if old not in mappings:
fname = self.get_filename()
outdirs, _ = self.get_install_dir(self.environment)
new = os.path.join(prefix, outdirs[0], fname)
result.update({old: new})
mappings.update(result)
return mappings
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return environment.get_shared_lib_dir()
def determine_filenames(self, env):
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
"""
See https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 for details.
First we determine the filename template (self.filename_tpl), then we
set the output filename (self.filename).
The template is needed while creating aliases (self.get_aliases),
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
which are needed while generating .so shared libraries for Linux.
Besides this, there's also the import library name, which is only used
on Windows since on that platform the linker uses a separate library
called the "import library" during linking instead of the shared
library (DLL). The toolchain will output an import library in one of
two formats: GCC or Visual Studio.
When we're building with Visual Studio, the import library that will be
generated by the toolchain is self.vs_import_filename, and with
MinGW/GCC, it's self.gcc_import_filename. self.import_filename will
always contain the import library name this target will generate.
"""
prefix = ''
suffix = ''
self.filename_tpl = self.basic_filename_tpl
# NOTE: manual prefix/suffix override is currently only tested for C/C++
# C# and Mono
if 'cs' in self.compilers:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
prefix = ''
suffix = 'dll'
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
# C, C++, Swift, Vala
# Only Windows uses a separate import library for linking
# For all other targets/platforms import_filename stays None
elif env.machines[self.for_machine].is_windows():
suffix = 'dll'
self.vs_import_filename = '{0}{1}.lib'.format(self.prefix if self.prefix is not None else '', self.name)
self.gcc_import_filename = '{0}{1}.dll.a'.format(self.prefix if self.prefix is not None else 'lib', self.name)
if self.get_using_rustc():
# Shared library is of the form foo.dll
prefix = ''
# Import library is called foo.dll.lib
self.import_filename = '{0}.dll.lib'.format(self.name)
elif self.get_using_msvc():
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# Shared library is of the form foo.dll
prefix = ''
# Import library is called foo.lib
self.import_filename = self.vs_import_filename
# Assume GCC-compatible naming
else:
# Shared library is of the form libfoo.dll
prefix = 'lib'
# Import library is called libfoo.dll.a
self.import_filename = self.gcc_import_filename
# Shared library has the soversion if it is defined
if self.soversion:
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}-{0.soversion}.{0.suffix}'
else:
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
elif env.machines[self.for_machine].is_cygwin():
suffix = 'dll'
self.gcc_import_filename = '{0}{1}.dll.a'.format(self.prefix if self.prefix is not None else 'lib', self.name)
# Shared library is of the form cygfoo.dll
# (ld --dll-search-prefix=cyg is the default)
prefix = 'cyg'
# Import library is called libfoo.dll.a
self.import_filename = self.gcc_import_filename
if self.soversion:
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}-{0.soversion}.{0.suffix}'
else:
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
elif env.machines[self.for_machine].is_darwin():
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
prefix = 'lib'
suffix = 'dylib'
# On macOS, the filename can only contain the major version
if self.soversion:
# libfoo.X.dylib
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.soversion}.{0.suffix}'
else:
# libfoo.dylib
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
elif env.machines[self.for_machine].is_android():
prefix = 'lib'
suffix = 'so'
# Android doesn't support shared_library versioning
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
else:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
prefix = 'lib'
suffix = 'so'
if self.ltversion:
# libfoo.so.X[.Y[.Z]] (.Y and .Z are optional)
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}.{0.ltversion}'
elif self.soversion:
# libfoo.so.X
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}.{0.soversion}'
else:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# No versioning, libfoo.so
self.filename_tpl = '{0.prefix}{0.name}.{0.suffix}'
if self.prefix is None:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.prefix = prefix
if self.suffix is None:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
self.suffix = suffix
self.filename = self.filename_tpl.format(self)
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.outputs = [self.filename]
@staticmethod
def _validate_darwin_versions(darwin_versions):
try:
if isinstance(darwin_versions, int):
darwin_versions = str(darwin_versions)
if isinstance(darwin_versions, str):
darwin_versions = 2 * [darwin_versions]
if not isinstance(darwin_versions, list):
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: must be a string, integer,'
'or a list, not {!r}'.format(darwin_versions))
if len(darwin_versions) > 2:
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: list must contain 2 or fewer elements')
if len(darwin_versions) == 1:
darwin_versions = 2 * darwin_versions
for i, v in enumerate(darwin_versions[:]):
if isinstance(v, int):
v = str(v)
if not isinstance(v, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: list elements '
'must be strings or integers, not {!r}'.format(v))
if not re.fullmatch(r'[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+){0,2}', v):
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: must be X.Y.Z where '
'X, Y, Z are numbers, and Y and Z are optional')
parts = v.split('.')
if len(parts) in (1, 2, 3) and int(parts[0]) > 65535:
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: must be X.Y.Z '
'where X is [0, 65535] and Y, Z are optional')
if len(parts) in (2, 3) and int(parts[1]) > 255:
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: must be X.Y.Z '
'where Y is [0, 255] and Y, Z are optional')
if len(parts) == 3 and int(parts[2]) > 255:
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: must be X.Y.Z '
'where Z is [0, 255] and Y, Z are optional')
darwin_versions[i] = v
except ValueError:
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library darwin_versions: value is invalid')
return darwin_versions
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs, environment):
super().process_kwargs(kwargs, environment)
if not self.environment.machines[self.for_machine].is_android():
supports_versioning = True
else:
supports_versioning = False
if supports_versioning:
# Shared library version
if 'version' in kwargs:
self.ltversion = kwargs['version']
if not isinstance(self.ltversion, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library version needs to be a string, not ' + type(self.ltversion).__name__)
if not re.fullmatch(r'[0-9]+(\.[0-9]+){0,2}', self.ltversion):
raise InvalidArguments('Invalid Shared library version "{0}". Must be of the form X.Y.Z where all three are numbers. Y and Z are optional.'.format(self.ltversion))
# Try to extract/deduce the soversion
if 'soversion' in kwargs:
self.soversion = kwargs['soversion']
if isinstance(self.soversion, int):
self.soversion = str(self.soversion)
if not isinstance(self.soversion, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Shared library soversion is not a string or integer.')
elif self.ltversion:
# library version is defined, get the soversion from that
# We replicate what Autotools does here and take the first
# number of the version by default.
self.soversion = self.ltversion.split('.')[0]
# macOS, iOS and tvOS dylib compatibility_version and current_version
if 'darwin_versions' in kwargs:
self.darwin_versions = self._validate_darwin_versions(kwargs['darwin_versions'])
elif self.soversion:
# If unspecified, pick the soversion
self.darwin_versions = 2 * [self.soversion]
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
# Visual Studio module-definitions file
if 'vs_module_defs' in kwargs:
path = kwargs['vs_module_defs']
if hasattr(path, 'held_object'):
path = path.held_object
if isinstance(path, str):
if os.path.isabs(path):
self.vs_module_defs = File.from_absolute_file(path)
else:
self.vs_module_defs = File.from_source_file(environment.source_dir, self.subdir, path)
self.link_depends.append(self.vs_module_defs)
elif isinstance(path, File):
# When passing a generated file.
self.vs_module_defs = path
self.link_depends.append(path)
elif hasattr(path, 'get_filename'):
# When passing output of a Custom Target
path = File.from_built_file(path.subdir, path.get_filename())
self.vs_module_defs = path
self.link_depends.append(path)
else:
raise InvalidArguments(
'Shared library vs_module_defs must be either a string, '
'a file object or a Custom Target')
if 'rust_crate_type' in kwargs:
rust_crate_type = kwargs['rust_crate_type']
if isinstance(rust_crate_type, str):
self.rust_crate_type = rust_crate_type
else:
raise InvalidArguments('Invalid rust_crate_type "{0}": must be a string.'.format(rust_crate_type))
def get_import_filename(self):
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
"""
The name of the import library that will be outputted by the compiler
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
Returns None if there is no import library required for this platform
"""
return self.import_filename
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
def get_import_filenameslist(self):
if self.import_filename:
return [self.vs_import_filename, self.gcc_import_filename]
return []
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
def get_all_link_deps(self):
return [self] + self.get_transitive_link_deps()
def get_aliases(self):
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
"""
If the versioned library name is libfoo.so.0.100.0, aliases are:
* libfoo.so.0 (soversion) -> libfoo.so.0.100.0
* libfoo.so (unversioned; for linking) -> libfoo.so.0
Same for dylib:
* libfoo.dylib (unversioned; for linking) -> libfoo.0.dylib
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
"""
aliases = {}
# Aliases are only useful with .so and .dylib libraries. Also if
# there's no self.soversion (no versioning), we don't need aliases.
if self.suffix not in ('so', 'dylib') or not self.soversion:
return {}
# With .so libraries, the minor and micro versions are also in the
# filename. If ltversion != soversion we create an soversion alias:
# libfoo.so.0 -> libfoo.so.0.100.0
# Where libfoo.so.0.100.0 is the actual library
if self.suffix == 'so' and self.ltversion and self.ltversion != self.soversion:
Overhaul versioning and naming of libraries This commit contains several changes to the naming and versioning of shared and static libraries. The details are documented at: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/pull/417 Here's a brief summary: * The results of binary and compiler detection via environment functions are now cached so that they can be called repeatedly without performance penalty. This is necessary because every build.SharedLibrary object has to know whether the compiler is MSVC or not (output filenames depend on that), and so the compiler detection has to be called for each object instantiation. * Linux shared libraries don't always have a library version. Sometimes only soversions are specified (and vice-versa), so support both. * Don't use versioned filenames when generating DLLs, DLLs are never versioned using the suffix in the way that .so libraries are. Hence, they don't use "aliases". Only Linux shared libraries use those. * OS X dylibs do not use filename aliases at all. They only use the soversion in the dylib name (libfoo.X.dylib), and that's it. If there's no soversion specified, the dylib is called libfoo.dylib. Further versioning in dylibs is supposed to be done with the -current_version argument to clang, but this is TBD. https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/DeveloperTools/Conceptual/DynamicLibraries/100-Articles/DynamicLibraryDesignGuidelines.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40002013-SW23 * Install DLLs into bindir and import libraries into libdir * Static libraries are now always called libfoo.a, even with MSVC * .lib import libraries are always generated when building with MSVC * .dll.a import libraries are always generated when building with MinGW/GCC or MinGW/clang * TODO: Use dlltool if available to generate .dll.a when .lib is generated and vice-versa. * Library and executable suffix/prefixes are now always correctly overriden by the values of the 'name_prefix' and 'name_suffix' keyword arguments.
9 years ago
alias_tpl = self.filename_tpl.replace('ltversion', 'soversion')
ltversion_filename = alias_tpl.format(self)
aliases[ltversion_filename] = self.filename
# libfoo.so.0/libfoo.0.dylib is the actual library
else:
ltversion_filename = self.filename
# Unversioned alias:
# libfoo.so -> libfoo.so.0
# libfoo.dylib -> libfoo.0.dylib
aliases[self.basic_filename_tpl.format(self)] = ltversion_filename
return aliases
def type_suffix(self):
return "@sha"
def is_linkable_target(self):
return True
# A shared library that is meant to be used with dlopen rather than linking
# into something else.
class SharedModule(SharedLibrary):
known_kwargs = known_shmod_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
if 'version' in kwargs:
raise MesonException('Shared modules must not specify the version kwarg.')
if 'soversion' in kwargs:
raise MesonException('Shared modules must not specify the soversion kwarg.')
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, for_machine, sources, objects, environment, kwargs)
self.typename = 'shared module'
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return environment.get_shared_module_dir()
class CustomTarget(Target):
known_kwargs = set([
'input',
'output',
'command',
'capture',
'install',
'install_dir',
'install_mode',
'build_always',
'build_always_stale',
'depends',
'depend_files',
'depfile',
'build_by_default',
'override_options',
'console',
])
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, kwargs, absolute_paths=False, backend=None):
self.typename = 'custom'
# TODO expose keyword arg to make MachineChoice.HOST configurable
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, False, MachineChoice.HOST)
self.dependencies = []
self.extra_depends = []
self.depend_files = [] # Files that this target depends on but are not on the command line.
self.depfile = None
self.process_kwargs(kwargs, backend)
self.extra_files = []
# Whether to use absolute paths for all files on the commandline
self.absolute_paths = absolute_paths
unknowns = []
for k in kwargs:
if k not in CustomTarget.known_kwargs:
unknowns.append(k)
if len(unknowns) > 0:
mlog.warning('Unknown keyword arguments in target %s: %s' %
(self.name, ', '.join(unknowns)))
def get_default_install_dir(self, environment):
return None
def __lt__(self, other):
return self.get_id() < other.get_id()
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0} {1}: {2}>"
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.get_id(), self.command)
def get_target_dependencies(self):
deps = self.dependencies[:]
deps += self.extra_depends
for c in self.sources:
if hasattr(c, 'held_object'):
c = c.held_object
if isinstance(c, (BuildTarget, CustomTarget)):
deps.append(c)
return deps
def get_transitive_build_target_deps(self):
'''
Recursively fetch the build targets that this custom target depends on,
whether through `command:`, `depends:`, or `sources:` The recursion is
only performed on custom targets.
This is useful for setting PATH on Windows for finding required DLLs.
F.ex, if you have a python script that loads a C module that links to
other DLLs in your project.
'''
bdeps = set()
deps = self.get_target_dependencies()
for d in deps:
if isinstance(d, BuildTarget):
bdeps.add(d)
elif isinstance(d, CustomTarget):
bdeps.update(d.get_transitive_build_target_deps())
return bdeps
def flatten_command(self, cmd):
cmd = listify(cmd, unholder=True)
final_cmd = []
for c in cmd:
if isinstance(c, str):
final_cmd.append(c)
elif isinstance(c, File):
self.depend_files.append(c)
final_cmd.append(c)
elif isinstance(c, dependencies.ExternalProgram):
if not c.found():
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to use not-found external program in "command"')
path = c.get_path()
if os.path.isabs(path):
# Can only add a dependency on an external program which we
# know the absolute path of
self.depend_files.append(File.from_absolute_file(path))
final_cmd += c.get_command()
elif isinstance(c, (BuildTarget, CustomTarget)):
self.dependencies.append(c)
final_cmd.append(c)
elif isinstance(c, list):
final_cmd += self.flatten_command(c)
else:
raise InvalidArguments('Argument {!r} in "command" is invalid'.format(c))
return final_cmd
def process_kwargs(self, kwargs, backend):
super().process_kwargs(kwargs)
self.sources = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'input', unholder=True)
if 'output' not in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('Missing keyword argument "output".')
self.outputs = listify(kwargs['output'])
# This will substitute values from the input into output and return it.
inputs = get_sources_string_names(self.sources, backend)
values = get_filenames_templates_dict(inputs, [])
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
for i in self.outputs:
if not(isinstance(i, str)):
raise InvalidArguments('Output argument not a string.')
if i == '':
raise InvalidArguments('Output must not be empty.')
if i.strip() == '':
raise InvalidArguments('Output must not consist only of whitespace.')
if has_path_sep(i):
raise InvalidArguments('Output {!r} must not contain a path segment.'.format(i))
if '@INPUT@' in i or '@INPUT0@' in i:
m = 'Output cannot contain @INPUT@ or @INPUT0@, did you ' \
'mean @PLAINNAME@ or @BASENAME@?'
raise InvalidArguments(m)
# We already check this during substitution, but the error message
# will be unclear/confusing, so check it here.
if len(inputs) != 1 and ('@PLAINNAME@' in i or '@BASENAME@' in i):
m = "Output cannot contain @PLAINNAME@ or @BASENAME@ when " \
"there is more than one input (we can't know which to use)"
raise InvalidArguments(m)
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.outputs = substitute_values(self.outputs, values)
self.capture = kwargs.get('capture', False)
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
if self.capture and len(self.outputs) != 1:
raise InvalidArguments('Capturing can only output to a single file.')
self.console = kwargs.get('console', False)
if not isinstance(self.console, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('"console" kwarg only accepts booleans')
if self.capture and self.console:
raise InvalidArguments("Can't both capture output and output to console")
if 'command' not in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('Missing keyword argument "command".')
if 'depfile' in kwargs:
depfile = kwargs['depfile']
if not isinstance(depfile, str):
raise InvalidArguments('Depfile must be a string.')
if os.path.basename(depfile) != depfile:
raise InvalidArguments('Depfile must be a plain filename without a subdirectory.')
self.depfile = depfile
self.command = self.flatten_command(kwargs['command'])
if self.capture:
for c in self.command:
if isinstance(c, str) and '@OUTPUT@' in c:
raise InvalidArguments('@OUTPUT@ is not allowed when capturing output.')
if 'install' in kwargs:
self.install = kwargs['install']
if not isinstance(self.install, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('"install" must be boolean.')
if self.install:
if 'install_dir' not in kwargs:
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
raise InvalidArguments('"install_dir" must be specified '
'when installing a target')
if isinstance(kwargs['install_dir'], list):
FeatureNew('multiple install_dir for custom_target', '0.40.0').use(self.subproject)
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
# If an item in this list is False, the output corresponding to
# the list index of that item will not be installed
self.install_dir = typeslistify(kwargs['install_dir'], (str, bool))
self.install_mode = kwargs.get('install_mode', None)
else:
self.install = False
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.install_dir = [None]
self.install_mode = None
if 'build_always' in kwargs and 'build_always_stale' in kwargs:
raise InvalidArguments('build_always and build_always_stale are mutually exclusive. Combine build_by_default and build_always_stale.')
elif 'build_always' in kwargs:
mlog.deprecation('build_always is deprecated. Combine build_by_default and build_always_stale instead.')
if 'build_by_default' not in kwargs:
self.build_by_default = kwargs['build_always']
self.build_always_stale = kwargs['build_always']
elif 'build_always_stale' in kwargs:
self.build_always_stale = kwargs['build_always_stale']
if not isinstance(self.build_always_stale, bool):
raise InvalidArguments('Argument build_always_stale must be a boolean.')
extra_deps, depend_files = extract_as_list(kwargs, 'depends', 'depend_files', pop = False)
for ed in extra_deps:
while hasattr(ed, 'held_object'):
ed = ed.held_object
if not isinstance(ed, (CustomTarget, BuildTarget)):
raise InvalidArguments('Can only depend on toplevel targets: custom_target or build_target (executable or a library) got: %s(%s)'
% (type(ed), ed))
self.extra_depends.append(ed)
for i in depend_files:
if isinstance(i, (File, str)):
self.depend_files.append(i)
else:
mlog.debug(i)
raise InvalidArguments('Unknown type {!r} in depend_files.'.format(type(i).__name__))
def get_dependencies(self):
return self.dependencies
def should_install(self):
return self.install
def get_custom_install_dir(self):
return self.install_dir
def get_custom_install_mode(self):
return self.install_mode
def get_outputs(self):
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
return self.outputs
def get_filename(self):
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
return self.outputs[0]
def get_sources(self):
return self.sources
def get_generated_lists(self):
genlists = []
for c in self.sources:
if hasattr(c, 'held_object'):
c = c.held_object
if isinstance(c, GeneratedList):
genlists.append(c)
return genlists
def get_generated_sources(self):
return self.get_generated_lists()
def get_dep_outname(self, infilenames):
if self.depfile is None:
raise InvalidArguments('Tried to get depfile name for custom_target that does not have depfile defined.')
if len(infilenames):
plainname = os.path.basename(infilenames[0])
basename = os.path.splitext(plainname)[0]
return self.depfile.replace('@BASENAME@', basename).replace('@PLAINNAME@', plainname)
else:
if '@BASENAME@' in self.depfile or '@PLAINNAME@' in self.depfile:
raise InvalidArguments('Substitution in depfile for custom_target that does not have an input file.')
return self.depfile
def is_linkable_target(self):
if len(self.outputs) != 1:
return False
suf = os.path.splitext(self.outputs[0])[-1]
if suf == '.a' or suf == '.dll' or suf == '.lib' or suf == '.so':
return True
6 years ago
def get_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
return {}
def get_link_dep_subdirs(self):
return OrderedSet()
def get_all_link_deps(self):
return []
def type_suffix(self):
return "@cus"
def __getitem__(self, index):
return CustomTargetIndex(self, self.outputs[index])
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
raise NotImplementedError
def __delitem__(self, index):
raise NotImplementedError
class RunTarget(Target):
def __init__(self, name, command, args, dependencies, subdir, subproject):
self.typename = 'run'
# These don't produce output artifacts
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, False, MachineChoice.BUILD)
self.command = command
self.args = args
self.dependencies = dependencies
def __lt__(self, other):
return self.get_id() < other.get_id()
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0} {1}: {2}>"
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, self.get_id(), self.command)
def get_dependencies(self):
return self.dependencies
def get_generated_sources(self):
return []
10 years ago
def get_sources(self):
return []
def should_install(self):
return False
def get_filename(self):
return self.name
def get_outputs(self):
6 years ago
if isinstance(self.name, str):
return [self.name]
elif isinstance(self.name, list):
return self.name
else:
raise RuntimeError('RunTarget: self.name is neither a list nor a string. This is a bug')
def type_suffix(self):
return "@run"
class AliasTarget(RunTarget):
def __init__(self, name, dependencies, subdir, subproject):
super().__init__(name, '', [], dependencies, subdir, subproject)
class Jar(BuildTarget):
known_kwargs = known_jar_kwargs
def __init__(self, name, subdir, subproject, for_machine: MachineChoice, sources, objects, environment, kwargs):
self.typename = 'jar'
super().__init__(name, subdir, subproject, for_machine, sources, objects, environment, kwargs)
for s in self.sources:
if not s.endswith('.java'):
raise InvalidArguments('Jar source %s is not a java file.' % s)
for t in self.link_targets:
if not isinstance(t, Jar):
raise InvalidArguments('Link target %s is not a jar target.' % t)
self.filename = self.name + '.jar'
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
self.outputs = [self.filename]
self.java_args = kwargs.get('java_args', [])
def get_main_class(self):
return self.main_class
def type_suffix(self):
return "@jar"
def get_java_args(self):
return self.java_args
def validate_install(self, environment):
# All jar targets are installable.
pass
def is_linkable_target(self):
return True
def get_classpath_args(self):
cp_paths = [os.path.join(l.get_subdir(), l.get_filename()) for l in self.link_targets]
cp_string = os.pathsep.join(cp_paths)
if cp_string:
return ['-cp', os.pathsep.join(cp_paths)]
return []
class CustomTargetIndex:
7 years ago
"""A special opaque object returned by indexing a CustomTarget. This object
exists in meson, but acts as a proxy in the backends, making targets depend
on the CustomTarget it's derived from, but only adding one source file to
the sources.
"""
def __init__(self, target, output):
self.typename = 'custom'
self.target = target
self.output = output
self.for_machine = target.for_machine
def __repr__(self):
return '<CustomTargetIndex: {!r}[{}]>'.format(
self.target, self.target.get_outputs().index(self.output))
def get_outputs(self):
return [self.output]
def get_subdir(self):
return self.target.get_subdir()
def get_filename(self):
return self.output
def get_id(self):
return self.target.get_id()
def get_all_link_deps(self):
return self.target.get_all_link_deps()
def get_link_deps_mapping(self, prefix, environment):
return self.target.get_link_deps_mapping(prefix, environment)
def get_link_dep_subdirs(self):
return self.target.get_link_dep_subdirs()
def is_linkable_target(self):
suf = os.path.splitext(self.output)[-1]
if suf == '.a' or suf == '.dll' or suf == '.lib' or suf == '.so':
return True
class ConfigureFile:
def __init__(self, subdir, sourcename, targetname, configuration_data):
self.subdir = subdir
self.sourcename = sourcename
self.targetname = targetname
self.configuration_data = configuration_data
def __repr__(self):
repr_str = "<{0}: {1} -> {2}>"
src = os.path.join(self.subdir, self.sourcename)
dst = os.path.join(self.subdir, self.targetname)
return repr_str.format(self.__class__.__name__, src, dst)
def get_configuration_data(self):
return self.configuration_data
def get_subdir(self):
return self.subdir
def get_source_name(self):
return self.sourcename
def get_target_name(self):
return self.targetname
class ConfigurationData:
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.values = {}
def __repr__(self):
return repr(self.values)
def __contains__(self, value):
return value in self.values
def get(self, name):
return self.values[name] # (val, desc)
def keys(self):
return self.values.keys()
# A bit poorly named, but this represents plain data files to copy
# during install.
class Data:
def __init__(self, sources, install_dir, install_mode=None, rename=None):
self.sources = sources
self.install_dir = install_dir
self.install_mode = install_mode
self.sources = listify(self.sources)
for s in self.sources:
assert(isinstance(s, File))
if rename is None:
self.rename = [os.path.basename(f.fname) for f in self.sources]
else:
self.rename = stringlistify(rename)
if len(self.rename) != len(self.sources):
raise MesonException('Size of rename argument is different from number of sources')
class RunScript(dict):
def __init__(self, script, args):
super().__init__()
assert(isinstance(script, list))
assert(isinstance(args, list))
self['exe'] = script
self['args'] = args
class TestSetup:
def __init__(self, exe_wrapper: typing.Optional[typing.List[str]], gdb: bool,
timeout_multiplier: int, env: EnvironmentVariables):
self.exe_wrapper = exe_wrapper
self.gdb = gdb
self.timeout_multiplier = timeout_multiplier
self.env = env
def get_sources_string_names(sources, backend):
'''
For the specified list of @sources which can be strings, Files, or targets,
get all the output basenames.
'''
names = []
for s in sources:
if hasattr(s, 'held_object'):
s = s.held_object
if isinstance(s, str):
names.append(s)
elif isinstance(s, (BuildTarget, CustomTarget, CustomTargetIndex, GeneratedList)):
names += s.get_outputs()
elif isinstance(s, ExtractedObjects):
names += s.get_outputs(backend)
elif isinstance(s, File):
names.append(s.fname)
else:
raise AssertionError('Unknown source type: {!r}'.format(s))
return names
def load(build_dir: str) -> Build:
filename = os.path.join(build_dir, 'meson-private', 'build.dat')
load_fail_msg = 'Build data file {!r} is corrupted. Try with a fresh build tree.'.format(filename)
nonexisting_fail_msg = 'No such build data file as "{!r}".'.format(filename)
try:
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
obj = pickle.load(f)
except FileNotFoundError:
raise MesonException(nonexisting_fail_msg)
except (pickle.UnpicklingError, EOFError):
raise MesonException(load_fail_msg)
except AttributeError:
raise MesonException(
"Build data file {!r} references functions or classes that don't "
"exist. This probably means that it was generated with an old "
"version of meson. Try running meson {} --wipe".format(filename, build_dir))
if not isinstance(obj, Build):
raise MesonException(load_fail_msg)
return obj
def save(obj, filename):
with open(filename, 'wb') as f:
pickle.dump(obj, f)