5.9 KiB
Wrap dependency system manual
One of the major problems of multiplatform development is wrangling all your dependencies. This is awkward on many platforms, especially on ones that do not have a built-in package manager. The latter problem has been worked around by having third party package managers. They are not really a solution for end user deployment, because you can't tell them to install a package manager just to use your app. On these platforms you must produce self-contained applications. Same applies when destination platform is missing (up-to-date versions of) your application's dependencies.
The traditional approach to this has been to bundle dependencies inside your own project. Either as prebuilt libraries and headers or by embedding the source code inside your source tree and rewriting your build system to build them as part of your project.
This is both tedious and error prone because it is always done by hand. The Wrap dependency system of Meson aims to provide an automated way to do this.
How it works
Meson has a concept of subprojects. They are a way of nesting one Meson project inside another. Any project that builds with Meson can detect that it is built as a subproject and build itself in a way that makes it easy to use (usually this means as a static library).
To use this kind of a project as a dependency you could just copy and
extract it inside your project's subprojects
directory.
However there is a simpler way. You can specify a Wrap file that tells Meson how to download it for you. If you then use this subproject in your build, Meson will automatically download and extract it during build. This makes subproject embedding extremely easy.
All wrap files must have a name of <project_name>.wrap
form and be in subprojects
dir.
Currently Meson has four kinds of wraps:
- wrap-file
- wrap-git
- wrap-hg
- wrap-svn
wrap format
Wrap files are written in ini format, with a single header containing the type
of wrap, followed by properties describing how to obtain the sources, validate
them, and modify them if needed. An example wrap-file for the wrap named
libfoobar
would have a filename libfoobar.wrap
and would look like this:
[wrap-file]
directory = libfoobar-1.0
source_url = https://example.com/foobar-1.0.tar.gz
source_filename = foobar-1.0.tar.gz
source_hash = 5ebeea0dfb75d090ea0e7ff84799b2a7a1550db3fe61eb5f6f61c2e971e57663
An example wrap-git will look like this:
[wrap-git]
url = https://github.com/libfoobar/libfoobar.git
revision = head
Accepted configuration properties for wraps
directory
- name of the subproject root directory, defaults to the name of the wrap.
Specific to wrap-file
source_url
- download url to retrieve the wrap-file source archivesource_filename
- filename of the downloaded source archivesource_hash
- sha256 checksum of the downloaded source archivepatch_url
- download url to retrieve an optional overlay archivepatch_filename
- filename of the downloaded overlay archivepatch_hash
- sha256 checksum of the downloaded overlay archivelead_directory_missing
- forwrap-file
create the leading directory name. Needed when the source file does not have a leading directory.
Since 0.49.0 if source_filename
or patch_filename
is found in the
project's subprojects/packagecache
directory, it will be used instead
of downloading the file, even if --wrap-mode
option is set to
nodownload
. The file's hash will be checked.
Specific to VCS-based wraps
url
- name of the wrap-git repository to clone. Required.revision
- name of the revision to checkout. Must be either: a valid value (such as a git tag) for the VCS'scheckout
command, or (for git)head
to track upstream's default branch. Required.
Specific to wrap-git
depth
- shallowly clone the repository to X number of commits. Note that git always allow shallowly cloning branches, but in order to clone commit ids shallowly, the server must supportuploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant=true
. (since 0.52.0)push-url
- alternative url to configure as a git push-url. Useful if the subproject will be developed and changes pushed upstream. (since 0.37.0)clone-recursive
- also clone submodules of the repository (since 0.48.0)
wrap-file with Meson build patch
Unfortunately most software projects in the world do not build with Meson. Because of this Meson allows you to specify a patch URL.
For historic reasons this is called a "patch", however, it serves as an overlay to add or replace files rather than modifying them. The file must be an archive; it is downloaded and automatically extracted into the subproject. The extracted files will include a meson build definition for the given subproject.
This approach makes it extremely simple to embed dependencies that require build system changes. You can write the Meson build definition for the dependency in total isolation. This is a lot better than doing it inside your own source tree, especially if it contains hundreds of thousands of lines of code. Once you have a working build definition, just zip up the Meson build files (and others you have changed) and put them somewhere where you can download them.
Meson build patches are only supported for wrap-file mode. When using wrap-git, the repository must contain all Meson build definitions.
Using wrapped projects
Wraps provide a convenient way of obtaining a project into your subproject directory. Then you use it as a regular subproject (see subprojects).
Getting wraps
Usually you don't want to write your wraps by hand.
There is an online repository called WrapDB that provides many dependencies ready to use. You can read more about WrapDB here.
There is also a Meson subcommand to get and manage wraps (see using wraptool).