# Getting meson Meson is implemented in Python 3, and requires 3.5 or newer. If your operating system provides a package manager, you should install it with that. For platforms that don't have a package manager, you need to download it from [Python's home page]. See below for [platform-specific Python3 quirks](#Platform-specific_install_quirks). ## Downloading Meson Meson releases can be downloaded from the [GitHub release page], and you can run `./meson.py` from inside a release or the git repository itself without doing anything special. On Windows, if you did not install Python with the installer options that make Python scripts executable, you will have to run `python /path/to/meson.py`, where `python` is Python 3.5 or newer. The newest development code can be obtained directly from [Git], and we strive to ensure that it will always be working and usable. All commits go through a pull-request process that runs CI and tests several platforms. ## Installing Meson with pip Meson is available in the [Python Package Index] and can be installed with `pip3 install meson` which requires root and will install it system-wide. Alternatively, you can use `pip3 install --user meson` which will install it for your user and does not require any special privileges. This will install the package in `~/.local/`, so you will have to add `~/.local/bin` to your `PATH`. ## Installing Meson and Ninja with the MSI installer We provide an MSI installer on the [GitHub release page] that can be used to install both Meson and Ninja at once for Windows. It also contains an embedded copy of Python, so scripts that use the [Python module](Python-module.md) and do not have any external dependencies will continue to work as expected. Please note that this is a new feature, so bug reports are expected and welcome! ## Dependencies In the most common case, you will need the [Ninja executable] for using the `ninja` backend, which is the default in Meson. This backend can be used on all platforms and with all toolchains, including GCC, Clang, Visual Studio, MinGW, ICC, ARMCC, etc. You can use the version provided by your package manager if possible, otherwise download the binary executable from the [Ninja project's release page](https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases). If you will only use the Visual Studio backend (`--backend=vs`) to generate Visual Studio solutions on Windows or the XCode backend (`--backend=xcode`) to generate XCode projects on macOS, you do not need Ninja. # Platform-specific install quirks ## Windows Python3 quirks When installing Python 3, it is highly recommended (but not required) that you select the installer options as follows: ![installer step 1](images/py3-install-1.png "Enable 'Add Python 3.6 to PATH' and click 'Customize installation'") ![installer step 2](images/py3-install-2.png "Optional Features: ensure 'pip' is enabled") ![installer step 3](images/py3-install-2.png "Advanced Options: enable 'Install for all users'") With this, you will have `python` and `pip` in `PATH`, and you can install Meson with pip. You will also be able to directly run `meson` in any shell on Windows instead of having to run `py -3` with the full path to the `meson.py` script. ## MSYS2 Python3 quirks If you are using MSYS2 on Windows as your development environment, please make sure that you **do not use** the `msys/python` package to provide Python 3. Use either `mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-python3` or `mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-python3` depending on which MinGW target you are building for. [GitHub release page]: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/releases [Python Package Index]: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/meson/ [Git]: https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson [Python's home page]: https://www.python.org/downloads/ [Ninja executable]: https://ninja-build.org/