--- short-description: Setting up native compilation ... # Persistent native environments New in 0.49.0 Meson has [cross files for describing cross compilation environments](Cross-compilation.md), for describing native environments it has equivalent "native files". Natives describe the *build machine*, and can be used to override properties of non-cross builds, as well as properties that are marked as "native" in a cross build. There are a couple of reasons you might want to use a native file to keep a persistent environment: * To build with a non-default native tool chain (such as clang instead of gcc) * To use a non-default version of another binary, such as yacc, or llvm-config ## Changing native file settings All of the rules about cross files and changed settings apply to native files as well, see [here](Cross-compilation.md#changing-cross-file-settings) ## Defining the environment ### Binaries Currently the only use of native files is to override native binaries. This includes the compilers and binaries collected with `find_program`, and those used by dependencies that use a config-tool instead of pkgconfig for detection, like `llvm-config` ```ini [binaries] c = '/usr/local/bin/clang' cpp = '/usr/local/bin/clang++' rust = '/usr/local/bin/rust' llvm-config = '/usr/local/llvm-svn/bin/llvm-config' ``` ### Paths and Directories As of 0.50.0 paths and directories such as libdir can be defined in the native file in a paths section ```ini [paths] libdir = 'mylibdir' prefix = '/my prefix' ``` These values will only be loaded when not cross compiling. Any arguments on the command line will override any options in the native file. For example, passing `--libdir=otherlibdir` would result in a prefix of `/my prefix` and a libdir of `otherlibdir`. ## Loading multiple native files Native files allow layering (cross files can be layered since meson 0.52.0). More than one native file can be loaded, with values from a previous file being overridden by the next. The intention of this is not overriding, but to allow composing native files. For example, if there is a project using C and C++, python 3.4-3.7, and LLVM 5-7, and it needs to build with clang 5, 6, and 7, and gcc 5.x, 6.x, and 7.x; expressing all of these configurations in monolithic configurations would result in 81 different native files. By layering them, it can be expressed by just 12 native files. ## Native file locations Like cross files, native files may be installed to user or system wide locations, defined as: - $XDG_DATA_DIRS/meson/native (/usr/local/share/meson/native:/usr/share/meson/native if $XDG_DATA_DIRS is undefined) - $XDG_DATA_HOME/meson/native ($HOME/.local/share/meson/native if $XDG_DATA_HOME is undefined) The order of locations tried is as follows: - A file relative to the local dir - The user local location - The system wide locations in order These files are not intended to be shipped by distributions, unless they are specifically for distribution packaging, they are mainly intended for developers.