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303 lines
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303 lines
11 KiB
# Wrap dependency system manual |
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One of the major problems of multiplatform development is wrangling |
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all your dependencies. This is awkward on many platforms, especially |
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on ones that do not have a built-in package manager. The latter problem |
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has been worked around by having third party package managers. They |
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are not really a solution for end user deployment, because you can't |
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tell them to install a package manager just to use your app. On these |
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platforms you must produce self-contained applications. Same applies |
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when destination platform is missing (up-to-date versions of) your |
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application's dependencies. |
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The traditional approach to this has been to bundle dependencies |
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inside your own project. Either as prebuilt libraries and headers or |
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by embedding the source code inside your source tree and rewriting |
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your build system to build them as part of your project. |
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This is both tedious and error prone because it is always done by |
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hand. The Wrap dependency system of Meson aims to provide an automated |
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way to do this. |
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## How it works |
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Meson has a concept of [subprojects](Subprojects.md). They are a way |
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of nesting one Meson project inside another. Any project that builds |
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with Meson can detect that it is built as a subproject and build |
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itself in a way that makes it easy to use (usually this means as a |
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static library). |
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To use this kind of a project as a dependency you could just copy and |
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extract it inside your project's `subprojects` directory. |
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However there is a simpler way. You can specify a Wrap file that tells |
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Meson how to download it for you. If you then use this subproject in |
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your build, Meson will automatically download and extract it during |
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build. This makes subproject embedding extremely easy. |
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All wrap files must have a name of `<project_name>.wrap` form and be |
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in `subprojects` dir. |
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Currently Meson has four kinds of wraps: |
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- wrap-file |
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- wrap-git |
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- wrap-hg |
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- wrap-svn |
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## wrap format |
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Wrap files are written in ini format, with a single header containing |
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the type of wrap, followed by properties describing how to obtain the |
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sources, validate them, and modify them if needed. An example |
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wrap-file for the wrap named `libfoobar` would have a filename |
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`libfoobar.wrap` and would look like this: |
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```ini |
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[wrap-file] |
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directory = libfoobar-1.0 |
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source_url = https://example.com/foobar-1.0.tar.gz |
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source_filename = foobar-1.0.tar.gz |
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source_hash = 5ebeea0dfb75d090ea0e7ff84799b2a7a1550db3fe61eb5f6f61c2e971e57663 |
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``` |
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An example wrap-git will look like this: |
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```ini |
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[wrap-git] |
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url = https://github.com/libfoobar/libfoobar.git |
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revision = head |
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depth = 1 |
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``` |
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## Accepted configuration properties for wraps |
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- `directory` - name of the subproject root directory, defaults to the |
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name of the wrap. |
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Since *0.55.0* those can be used in all wrap types, they were |
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previously reserved to `wrap-file`: |
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- `patch_url` - download url to retrieve an optional overlay archive |
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- `patch_fallback_url` - fallback URL to be used when download from `patch_url` fails *Since: 0.55.0* |
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- `patch_filename` - filename of the downloaded overlay archive |
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- `patch_hash` - sha256 checksum of the downloaded overlay archive |
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- `patch_directory` - *Since 0.55.0* Overlay directory, alternative to `patch_filename` in the case |
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files are local instead of a downloaded archive. The directory must be placed in |
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`subprojects/packagefiles`. |
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- `diff_files` - *Since 0.63.0* Comma-separated list of local diff files (see |
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[Diff files](#diff-files) below). |
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### Specific to wrap-file |
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- `source_url` - download url to retrieve the wrap-file source archive |
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- `source_fallback_url` - fallback URL to be used when download from `source_url` fails *Since: 0.55.0* |
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- `source_filename` - filename of the downloaded source archive |
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- `source_hash` - sha256 checksum of the downloaded source archive |
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- `lead_directory_missing` - for `wrap-file` create the leading |
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directory name. Needed when the source file does not have a leading |
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directory. |
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Since *0.55.0* it is possible to use only the `source_filename` and |
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`patch_filename` value in a .wrap file (without `source_url` and |
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`patch_url`) to specify a local archive in the |
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`subprojects/packagefiles` directory. The `*_hash` entries are |
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optional when using this method. This method should be preferred over |
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the old `packagecache` approach described below. |
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Since *0.49.0* if `source_filename` or `patch_filename` is found in the |
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project's `subprojects/packagecache` directory, it will be used instead |
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of downloading the file, even if `--wrap-mode` option is set to |
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`nodownload`. The file's hash will be checked. |
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### Specific to VCS-based wraps |
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- `url` - name of the wrap-git repository to clone. Required. |
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- `revision` - name of the revision to checkout. Must be either: a |
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valid value (such as a git tag) for the VCS's `checkout` command, or |
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(for git) `head` to track upstream's default branch. Required. |
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### Specific to wrap-git |
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- `depth` - shallowly clone the repository to X number of commits. This saves bandwidth and disk |
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space, and should typically always be specified unless commit history is needed. Note |
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that git always allow shallowly cloning branches, but in order to |
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clone commit ids shallowly, the server must support |
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`uploadpack.allowReachableSHA1InWant=true`. *(since 0.52.0)* |
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- `push-url` - alternative url to configure as a git push-url. Useful if |
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the subproject will be developed and changes pushed upstream. |
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*(since 0.37.0)* |
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- `clone-recursive` - also clone submodules of the repository |
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*(since 0.48.0)* |
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## wrap-file with Meson build patch |
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Unfortunately most software projects in the world do not build with |
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Meson. Because of this Meson allows you to specify a patch URL. |
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For historic reasons this is called a "patch", however, it serves as an |
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overlay to add or replace files rather than modifying them. The file |
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must be an archive; it is downloaded and automatically extracted into |
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the subproject. The extracted files will include a Meson build |
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definition for the given subproject. |
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This approach makes it extremely simple to embed dependencies that |
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require build system changes. You can write the Meson build definition |
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for the dependency in total isolation. This is a lot better than doing |
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it inside your own source tree, especially if it contains hundreds of |
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thousands of lines of code. Once you have a working build definition, |
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just zip up the Meson build files (and others you have changed) and |
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put them somewhere where you can download them. |
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Prior to *0.55.0* Meson build patches were only supported for |
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wrap-file mode. When using wrap-git, the repository must contain all |
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Meson build definitions. Since *0.55.0* Meson build patches are |
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supported for any wrap modes, including wrap-git. |
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## Diff files |
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*Since: 0.63.0* |
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You can also provide local patch files in `diff` format. For historic reasons, |
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they are referred to as "diff files", since the "patch" name is already used for |
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overlay archives. |
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The diff files are described by the `diff_files` property (a comma-separated |
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list), and must be available locally in the `subprojects/packagefiles` |
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directory. |
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Meson will apply the diff files after extracting or cloning the project, and |
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after applying the overlay archive (`patch_*`). For this feature, the `patch` or |
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`git` command-line tool must be available. |
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The diff files will be applied with `-p1`, i.e. treating the first path |
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component as a prefix to be stripped. This is the default for diffs produced by |
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Git. |
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```ini |
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[wrap-file] |
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directory = libfoobar-1.0 |
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source_url = https://example.com/foobar-1.0.tar.gz |
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source_filename = foobar-1.0.tar.gz |
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source_hash = 5ebeea0dfb75d090ea0e7ff84799b2a7a1550db3fe61eb5f6f61c2e971e57663 |
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diff_files = libfoobar-1.0/0001.patch, libfoobar-1.0/0002.patch |
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``` |
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## `provide` section |
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*Since *0.55.0* |
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Wrap files can define the dependencies it provides in the `[provide]` |
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section. |
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```ini |
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[provide] |
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dependency_names = foo-1.0 |
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``` |
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When a wrap file provides the dependency `foo-1.0`, as above, any call to |
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`dependency('foo-1.0')` will automatically fallback to that subproject even if |
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no `fallback` keyword argument is given. A wrap file named `foo.wrap` implicitly |
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provides the dependency name `foo` even when the `[provide]` section is missing. |
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Optional dependencies, like `dependency('foo-1.0', required: get_option('foo_opt'))` |
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where `foo_opt` is a feature option set to `auto`, will not fallback to the |
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subproject defined in the wrap file, for 2 reasons: |
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- It allows for looking the dependency in other ways first, for example using |
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`cc.find_library('foo')`, and only fallback if that fails: |
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```meson |
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# this won't use fallback defined in foo.wrap |
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foo_dep = dependency('foo-1.0', required: false) |
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if not foo_dep.found() |
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foo_dep = cc.find_library('foo', has_headers: 'foo.h', required: false) |
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if not foo_dep.found() |
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# This will use the fallback |
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foo_dep = dependency('foo-1.0') |
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# or |
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foo_dep = dependency('foo-1.0', required: false, fallback: 'foo') |
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endif |
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endif |
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``` |
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- Sometimes not-found dependency is preferable to a fallback when the |
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feature is not explicitly requested by the user. In that case |
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`dependency('foo-1.0', required: get_option('foo_opt'))` will only |
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fallback when the user sets `foo_opt` to `enabled` instead of |
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`auto`. |
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*Since 0.58.0* optional dependency like above will fallback to the subproject |
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defined in the wrap file in the case `wrap_mode` is set to `forcefallback` |
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or `force_fallback_for` contains the subproject. |
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If it is desired to fallback for an optional dependency, the |
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`fallback` or `allow_fallback` keyword arguments must be passed |
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explicitly. *Since 0.56.0*, `dependency('foo-1.0', required: |
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get_option('foo_opt'), allow_fallback: true)` will use the fallback |
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even when `foo_opt` is set to `auto`. On version *0.55.0* the same |
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effect could be achieved with `dependency('foo-1.0', required: |
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get_option('foo_opt'), fallback: 'foo')`. |
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This mechanism assumes the subproject calls |
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`meson.override_dependency('foo-1.0', foo_dep)` so Meson knows which |
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dependency object should be used as fallback. Since that method was |
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introduced in version *0.54.0*, as a transitional aid for projects |
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that do not yet make use of it the variable name can be provided in |
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the wrap file with entries in the format `foo-1.0 = foo_dep`. |
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For example when using a recent enough version of glib that uses |
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`meson.override_dependency()` to override `glib-2.0`, `gobject-2.0` |
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and `gio-2.0`, a wrap file would look like: |
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```ini |
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[wrap-git] |
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url=https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib.git |
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revision=glib-2-62 |
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depth=1 |
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[provide] |
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dependency_names = glib-2.0, gobject-2.0, gio-2.0 |
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``` |
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With older version of glib dependency variable names need to be |
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specified: |
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```ini |
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[wrap-git] |
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url=https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib.git |
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revision=glib-2-62 |
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depth=1 |
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[provide] |
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glib-2.0=glib_dep |
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gobject-2.0=gobject_dep |
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gio-2.0=gio_dep |
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``` |
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Programs can also be provided by wrap files, with the `program_names` |
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key: |
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```ini |
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[provide] |
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program_names = myprog, otherprog |
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``` |
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With such wrap file, `find_program('myprog')` will automatically |
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fallback to use the subproject, assuming it uses |
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`meson.override_find_program('myprog')`. |
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## Using wrapped projects |
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Wraps provide a convenient way of obtaining a project into your |
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subproject directory. Then you use it as a regular subproject (see |
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[subprojects](Subprojects.md)). |
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## Getting wraps |
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Usually you don't want to write your wraps by hand. |
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There is an online repository called |
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[WrapDB](https://wrapdb.mesonbuild.com) that provides many |
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dependencies ready to use. You can read more about WrapDB |
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[here](Using-the-WrapDB.md). |
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There is also a Meson subcommand to get and manage wraps (see [using |
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wraptool](Using-wraptool.md)).
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