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231 lines
8.1 KiB
231 lines
8.1 KiB
# Compiler properties |
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Not all compilers and platforms are alike. Therefore Meson provides |
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the tools to detect properties of the system during configure time. To |
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get most of this information, you first need to extract the *[compiler |
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object](Reference-manual_returned_compiler.html)* from the main |
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*meson* variable. |
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```meson |
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compiler = [[#meson.get_compiler]]('c') |
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``` |
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Here we extract the C compiler. We could also have given the argument |
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`cpp` to get the C++ compiler, `objc` to get the objective C compiler |
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and so on. The call is valid for all languages specified in the |
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*project* declaration. Trying to obtain some other compiler will lead |
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to an unrecoverable error. |
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## System information |
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This is a bit complex and more thoroughly explained on the page on |
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[cross compilation](Cross-compilation.md). But if you just want to |
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know the operating system your code will run on, issue this command: |
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```meson |
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host_machine.system() |
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``` |
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## Compiler id |
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The compiler object method [[compiler.get_id]] returns a |
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lower case string describing the "family" of the compiler. Since 0.53.0 |
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[[compiler.get_linker_id]] returns a lower case string with the linker name. Since |
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compilers can often choose from multiple linkers depending on operating |
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system, `get_linker_id` can be useful for handling or mitigating effects |
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of particular linkers. |
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The compiler object also has a method [[compiler.get_argument_syntax]] which |
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returns a lower case string of `gcc`, `msvc`, or another undefined string |
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value; identifying whether the compiler arguments use the same syntax as |
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either `gcc` or `msvc`, or that its arguments are not like either. This should |
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only be used to select the syntax of the arguments, such as those to test |
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with [[compiler.has_argument]]. |
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See [reference tables](Reference-tables.md#compiler-ids) for a list of |
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supported compiler ids and their argument type. |
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## Does code compile? |
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Sometimes the only way to test the system is to try to compile some |
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sample code and see if it works. For example, this can test that a |
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"C++17" compiler actually supports a particular C++17 feature, |
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without resorting to maintaining a feature list vs. compiler vendor, |
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compiler version and operating system. |
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Testing that a code snippet runs is a two-phase operation. First |
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we define some code using the multiline string operator: |
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```meson |
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code = '''#include<stdio.h> |
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void func() { printf("Compile me.\n"); } |
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''' |
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``` |
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Then we can run the test. |
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```meson |
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result = [[#compiler.compiles]](code, name : 'basic check') |
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``` |
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The variable *result* will now contain either `true` or `false` |
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depending on whether the compilation succeeded or not. The keyword |
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argument `name` is optional. If it is specified, Meson will write the |
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result of the check to its log. |
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## Does code compile and link? |
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Sometimes it is necessary to check whether a certain code fragment not |
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only compiles, but also links successfully, e.g. to check if a symbol |
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is actually present in a library. This can be done using the |
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[[compiler.links]] method like this: |
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```meson |
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code = '''#include<stdio.h> |
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void func() { printf("Compile me.\n"); } |
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''' |
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``` |
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Then we can run the test. |
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```meson |
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result = [[#compiler.links]](code, args : '-lfoo', name : 'link check') |
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``` |
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The variable *result* will now contain either `true` or `false` |
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depending on whether the compilation and linking succeeded or not. The |
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keyword argument `name` is optional. If it is specified, Meson will |
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write the result of the check to its log. |
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## Compile and run test application |
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Here is how you would compile and run a small test application. |
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Testing if a code snippets **runs** versus merely that it links |
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is particularly important for some dependencies such as MPI. |
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```meson |
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code = '''#include<stdio.h> |
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int main(int argc, char **argv) { |
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printf("%s\n", "stdout"); |
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fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", "stderr"); |
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return 0; |
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} |
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''' |
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result = [[#compiler.run]](code, name : 'basic check') |
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``` |
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The `result` variable encapsulates the state of the test, which can be |
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extracted with the following methods. The `name` keyword argument |
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works the same as with `compiles`. |
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| Method | Return value | |
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| ------ | ------------ | |
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| compiled | `True` if compilation succeeded. If `false` then all other methods return undefined values. | |
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| returncode | The return code of the application as an integer | |
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| stdout | Program's standard out as text. | |
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| stderr | Program's standard error as text. | |
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Here is an example usage: |
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```meson |
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if result.stdout().strip() == 'some_value' |
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# do something |
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endif |
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``` |
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## Does a header exist? |
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Header files provided by different platforms vary quite a lot. Meson |
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has functionality to detect whether a given header file is available |
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on the system. The test is done by trying to compile a simple test |
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program that includes the specified header. The following snippet |
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describes how this feature can be used. |
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```meson |
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if [[#compiler.has_header]]('sys/fstat.h') |
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# header exists, do something |
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endif |
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``` |
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## Expression size |
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Often you need to determine the size of a particular element (such as |
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`int`, `wchar_t` or `char*`). Using the `compiler` variable mentioned |
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above, the check can be done like this. |
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```meson |
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wcharsize = [[#compiler.sizeof]]('wchar_t', prefix : '#include<wchar.h>') |
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``` |
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This will put the size of `wchar_t` as reported by sizeof into |
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variable `wcharsize`. The keyword argument `prefix` is optional. If |
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specified its contents is put at the top of the source file. This |
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argument is typically used for setting `#include` directives in |
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configuration files. |
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In older versions (<= 0.30) Meson would error out if the size could |
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not be determined. Since version 0.31 it returns -1 if the size could |
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not be determined. |
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## Does a function exist? |
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Just having a header doesn't say anything about its contents. |
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Sometimes you need to explicitly check if some function exists. This |
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is how we would check whether the function `open_memstream` exists in |
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header `stdio.h` |
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```meson |
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if [[#compiler.has_function]]('open_memstream', prefix : '#include <stdio.h>') |
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# function exists, do whatever is required. |
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endif |
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``` |
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Note that, on macOS programs can be compiled targeting older macOS |
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versions than the one that the program is compiled on. It can't be |
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assumed that the OS version that is compiled on matches the OS version |
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that the binary will run on. |
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Therefore when detecting function availability with [[compiler.has_function]], it |
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is important to specify the correct header in the prefix argument. |
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In the example above, the function `open_memstream` is detected, which |
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was introduced in macOS 10.13. When the user builds on macOS 10.13, |
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but targeting macOS 10.11 (`-mmacosx-version-min=10.11`), this will |
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correctly report the function as missing. Without the header however, |
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it would lack the necessary availability information and incorrectly |
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report the function as available. |
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## Does a structure contain a member? |
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Some platforms have different standard structures. Here's how one |
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would check if a struct called `mystruct` from header `myheader.h` |
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contains a member called `some_member`. |
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```meson |
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if [[#compiler.has_member]]('struct mystruct', 'some_member', prefix : '#include<myheader.h>') |
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# member exists, do whatever is required |
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endif |
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``` |
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## Type alignment |
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Most platforms can't access some data types at any address. For |
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example it is common that a `char` can be at any address but a 32 bit |
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integer only at locations which are divisible by four. Determining the |
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alignment of data types is simple. |
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```meson |
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int_alignment = [[#compiler.alignment]]('int') # Will most likely contain the value 4. |
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``` |
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## Has argument |
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This method tests if the compiler supports a given command line |
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argument. This is implemented by compiling a small file with the given |
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argument. |
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```meson |
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has_special_flags = [[#compiler.has_argument]]('-Wspecialthing') |
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``` |
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*Note*: some compilers silently swallow command line arguments they do |
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not understand. Thus this test can not be made 100% reliable.
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