| // Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be |
| // found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| #include <algorithm> |
| #include <limits> |
| #include <memory> |
| #include <utility> |
| |
| #include "gn/c_tool.h" |
| #include "gn/err.h" |
| #include "gn/functions.h" |
| #include "gn/general_tool.h" |
| #include "gn/label.h" |
| #include "gn/label_ptr.h" |
| #include "gn/parse_tree.h" |
| #include "gn/scheduler.h" |
| #include "gn/scope.h" |
| #include "gn/settings.h" |
| #include "gn/tool.h" |
| #include "gn/toolchain.h" |
| #include "gn/value_extractors.h" |
| #include "gn/variables.h" |
| |
| namespace functions { |
| |
| namespace { |
| |
| // This is just a unique value to take the address of to use as the key for |
| // the toolchain property on a scope. |
| const int kToolchainPropertyKey = 0; |
| |
| } // namespace |
| |
| // toolchain ------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| const char kToolchain[] = "toolchain"; |
| const char kToolchain_HelpShort[] = "toolchain: Defines a toolchain."; |
| const char kToolchain_Help[] = |
| R"*(toolchain: Defines a toolchain. |
| |
| A toolchain is a set of commands and build flags used to compile the source |
| code. The toolchain() function defines these commands. |
| |
| Toolchain overview |
| |
| You can have more than one toolchain in use at once in a build and a target |
| can exist simultaneously in multiple toolchains. A build file is executed |
| once for each toolchain it is referenced in so the GN code can vary all |
| parameters of each target (or which targets exist) on a per-toolchain basis. |
| |
| When you have a simple build with only one toolchain, the build config file |
| is loaded only once at the beginning of the build. It must call |
| set_default_toolchain() (see "gn help set_default_toolchain") to tell GN the |
| label of the toolchain definition to use. The "toolchain_args" section of the |
| toolchain definition is ignored. |
| |
| When a target has a dependency on a target using different toolchain (see "gn |
| help labels" for how to specify this), GN will start a build using that |
| secondary toolchain to resolve the target. GN will load the build config file |
| with the build arguments overridden as specified in the toolchain_args. |
| Because the default toolchain is already known, calls to |
| set_default_toolchain() are ignored. |
| |
| To load a file in an alternate toolchain, GN does the following: |
| |
| 1. Loads the file with the toolchain definition in it (as determined by the |
| toolchain label). |
| 2. Re-runs the master build configuration file, applying the arguments |
| specified by the toolchain_args section of the toolchain definition. |
| 3. Loads the destination build file in the context of the configuration file |
| in the previous step. |
| |
| The toolchain configuration is two-way. In the default toolchain (i.e. the |
| main build target) the configuration flows from the build config file to the |
| toolchain. The build config file looks at the state of the build (OS type, |
| CPU architecture, etc.) and decides which toolchain to use (via |
| set_default_toolchain()). In secondary toolchains, the configuration flows |
| from the toolchain to the build config file: the "toolchain_args" in the |
| toolchain definition specifies the arguments to re-invoke the build. |
| |
| Functions and variables |
| |
| tool() |
| The tool() function call specifies the commands to run for a given step. See |
| "gn help tool". |
| |
| toolchain_args [scope] |
| Overrides for build arguments to pass to the toolchain when invoking it. |
| This is a variable of type "scope" where the variable names correspond to |
| variables in declare_args() blocks. |
| |
| When you specify a target using an alternate toolchain, the master build |
| configuration file is re-interpreted in the context of that toolchain. |
| toolchain_args allows you to control the arguments passed into this |
| alternate invocation of the build. |
| |
| Any default system arguments or arguments passed in via "gn args" will also |
| be passed to the alternate invocation unless explicitly overridden by |
| toolchain_args. |
| |
| The toolchain_args will be ignored when the toolchain being defined is the |
| default. In this case, it's expected you want the default argument values. |
| |
| See also "gn help buildargs" for an overview of these arguments. |
| |
| propagates_configs [boolean, default=false] |
| Determines whether public_configs and all_dependent_configs in this |
| toolchain propagate to targets in other toolchains. |
| |
| When false (the default), this toolchain will not propagate any configs to |
| targets in other toolchains that depend on it targets inside this |
| toolchain. This matches the most common usage of toolchains where they |
| represent different architectures or compilers and the settings that apply |
| to one won't necessarily apply to others. |
| |
| When true, configs (public and all-dependent) will cross the boundary out |
| of this toolchain as if the toolchain boundary wasn't there. This only |
| affects one direction of dependencies: a toolchain can't control whether |
| it accepts such configs, only whether it pushes them. The build is |
| responsible for ensuring that any external targets depending on targets in |
| this toolchain are compatible with the compiler flags, etc. that may be |
| propagated. |
| |
| deps [string list] |
| Dependencies of this toolchain. These dependencies will be resolved before |
| any target in the toolchain is compiled. To avoid circular dependencies |
| these must be targets defined in another toolchain. |
| |
| This is expressed as a list of targets, and generally these targets will |
| always specify a toolchain: |
| deps = [ "//foo/bar:baz(//build/toolchain:bootstrap)" ] |
| |
| This concept is somewhat inefficient to express in Ninja (it requires a lot |
| of duplicate of rules) so should only be used when absolutely necessary. |
| |
| Example of defining a toolchain |
| |
| toolchain("32") { |
| tool("cc") { |
| command = "gcc {{source}}" |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| toolchain_args = { |
| use_doom_melon = true # Doom melon always required for 32-bit builds. |
| current_cpu = "x86" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| toolchain("64") { |
| tool("cc") { |
| command = "gcc {{source}}" |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| toolchain_args = { |
| # use_doom_melon is not overridden here, it will take the default. |
| current_cpu = "x64" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Example of cross-toolchain dependencies |
| |
| If a 64-bit target wants to depend on a 32-bit binary, it would specify a |
| dependency using data_deps (data deps are like deps that are only needed at |
| runtime and aren't linked, since you can't link a 32-bit and a 64-bit |
| library). |
| |
| executable("my_program") { |
| ... |
| if (target_cpu == "x64") { |
| # The 64-bit build needs this 32-bit helper. |
| data_deps = [ ":helper(//toolchains:32)" ] |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (target_cpu == "x86") { |
| # Our helper library is only compiled in 32-bits. |
| shared_library("helper") { |
| ... |
| } |
| } |
| )*"; |
| |
| Value RunToolchain(Scope* scope, |
| const FunctionCallNode* function, |
| const std::vector<Value>& args, |
| BlockNode* block, |
| Err* err) { |
| NonNestableBlock non_nestable(scope, function, "toolchain"); |
| if (!non_nestable.Enter(err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| if (!EnsureNotProcessingImport(function, scope, err) || |
| !EnsureNotProcessingBuildConfig(function, scope, err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| if (!EnsureSingleStringArg(function, args, err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| // Note that we don't want to use MakeLabelForScope since that will include |
| // the toolchain name in the label, and toolchain labels don't themselves |
| // have toolchain names. |
| const SourceDir& input_dir = scope->GetSourceDir(); |
| Label label(input_dir, args[0].string_value()); |
| if (g_scheduler->verbose_logging()) |
| g_scheduler->Log("Defining toolchain", label.GetUserVisibleName(false)); |
| |
| // This object will actually be copied into the one owned by the toolchain |
| // manager, but that has to be done in the lock. |
| std::unique_ptr<Toolchain> toolchain = std::make_unique<Toolchain>( |
| scope->settings(), label, scope->build_dependency_files()); |
| toolchain->set_defined_from(function); |
| toolchain->visibility().SetPublic(); |
| |
| Scope block_scope(scope); |
| block_scope.SetProperty(&kToolchainPropertyKey, toolchain.get()); |
| block->Execute(&block_scope, err); |
| block_scope.SetProperty(&kToolchainPropertyKey, nullptr); |
| if (err->has_error()) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| // Read deps (if any). |
| const Value* deps_value = block_scope.GetValue(variables::kDeps, true); |
| if (deps_value) { |
| ExtractListOfLabels(scope->settings()->build_settings(), *deps_value, |
| block_scope.GetSourceDir(), |
| ToolchainLabelForScope(&block_scope), |
| &toolchain->deps(), err); |
| if (err->has_error()) |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| |
| // Read toolchain args (if any). |
| const Value* toolchain_args = block_scope.GetValue("toolchain_args", true); |
| if (toolchain_args) { |
| if (!toolchain_args->VerifyTypeIs(Value::SCOPE, err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| Scope::KeyValueMap values; |
| toolchain_args->scope_value()->GetCurrentScopeValues(&values); |
| toolchain->args() = values; |
| } |
| |
| // Read propagates_configs (if present). |
| const Value* propagates_configs = |
| block_scope.GetValue("propagates_configs", true); |
| if (propagates_configs) { |
| if (!propagates_configs->VerifyTypeIs(Value::BOOLEAN, err)) |
| return Value(); |
| toolchain->set_propagates_configs(propagates_configs->boolean_value()); |
| } |
| |
| if (!block_scope.CheckForUnusedVars(err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| // Save this toolchain. |
| toolchain->ToolchainSetupComplete(); |
| Scope::ItemVector* collector = scope->GetItemCollector(); |
| if (!collector) { |
| *err = Err(function, "Can't define a toolchain in this context."); |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| collector->push_back(std::move(toolchain)); |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| |
| // tool ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| const char kTool[] = "tool"; |
| const char kTool_HelpShort[] = "tool: Specify arguments to a toolchain tool."; |
| const char kTool_Help[] = |
| R"(tool: Specify arguments to a toolchain tool. |
| |
| Usage |
| |
| tool(<tool type>) { |
| <tool variables...> |
| } |
| |
| Tool types |
| |
| Compiler tools: |
| "cc": C compiler |
| "cxx": C++ compiler |
| "cxx_module": C++ compiler used for Clang .modulemap files |
| "objc": Objective C compiler |
| "objcxx": Objective C++ compiler |
| "rc": Resource compiler (Windows .rc files) |
| "asm": Assembler |
| "swift": Swift compiler driver |
| |
| Linker tools: |
| "alink": Linker for static libraries (archives) |
| "solink": Linker for shared libraries |
| "link": Linker for executables |
| |
| Other tools: |
| "stamp": Tool for creating stamp files |
| "copy": Tool to copy files. |
| "action": Defaults for actions |
| |
| Platform specific tools: |
| "copy_bundle_data": [iOS, macOS] Tool to copy files in a bundle. |
| "compile_xcassets": [iOS, macOS] Tool to compile asset catalogs. |
| |
| Rust tools: |
| "rust_bin": Tool for compiling Rust binaries |
| "rust_cdylib": Tool for compiling C-compatible dynamic libraries. |
| "rust_dylib": Tool for compiling Rust dynamic libraries. |
| "rust_macro": Tool for compiling Rust procedural macros. |
| "rust_rlib": Tool for compiling Rust libraries. |
| "rust_staticlib": Tool for compiling Rust static libraries. |
| |
| Tool variables |
| |
| command [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: all tools except "action" (required) |
| |
| The command to run. |
| |
| command_launcher [string] |
| Valid for: all tools except "action" (optional) |
| |
| The prefix with which to launch the command (e.g. the path to a Goma or |
| CCache compiler launcher). |
| |
| Note that this prefix will not be included in the compilation database or |
| IDE files generated from the build. |
| |
| default_output_dir [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: linker tools |
| |
| Default directory name for the output file relative to the |
| root_build_dir. It can contain other substitution patterns. This will |
| be the default value for the {{output_dir}} expansion (discussed below) |
| but will be overridden by the "output_dir" variable in a target, if one |
| is specified. |
| |
| GN doesn't do anything with this string other than pass it along, |
| potentially with target-specific overrides. It is the tool's job to use |
| the expansion so that the files will be in the right place. |
| |
| default_output_extension [string] |
| Valid for: linker tools |
| |
| Extension for the main output of a linkable tool. It includes the |
| leading dot. This will be the default value for the |
| {{output_extension}} expansion (discussed below) but will be overridden |
| by by the "output extension" variable in a target, if one is specified. |
| Empty string means no extension. |
| |
| GN doesn't actually do anything with this extension other than pass it |
| along, potentially with target-specific overrides. One would typically |
| use the {{output_extension}} value in the "outputs" to read this value. |
| |
| Example: default_output_extension = ".exe" |
| |
| depfile [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: compiler tools (optional) |
| |
| If the tool can write ".d" files, this specifies the name of the |
| resulting file. These files are used to list header file dependencies |
| (or other implicit input dependencies) that are discovered at build |
| time. See also "depsformat". |
| |
| Example: depfile = "{{output}}.d" |
| |
| depsformat [string] |
| Valid for: compiler tools (when depfile is specified) |
| |
| Format for the deps outputs. This is either "gcc" or "msvc". See the |
| ninja documentation for "deps" for more information. |
| |
| Example: depsformat = "gcc" |
| |
| description [string with substitutions, optional] |
| Valid for: all tools |
| |
| What to print when the command is run. |
| |
| Example: description = "Compiling {{source}}" |
| |
| exe_output_extension [string, optional, rust tools only] |
| rlib_output_extension [string, optional, rust tools only] |
| dylib_output_extension [string, optional, rust tools only] |
| cdylib_output_extension [string, optional, rust tools only] |
| rust_proc_macro_output_extension [string, optional, rust tools only] |
| Valid for: Rust tools |
| |
| These specify the default tool output for each of the crate types. |
| The default is empty for executables, shared, and static libraries and |
| ".rlib" for rlibs. Note that the Rust compiler complains with an error |
| if external crates do not take the form `lib<name>.rlib` or |
| `lib<name>.<shared_extension>`, where `<shared_extension>` is `.so`, |
| `.dylib`, or `.dll` as appropriate for the platform. |
| |
| lib_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| lib_dir_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| Valid for: Linker tools except "alink" |
| |
| These strings will be prepended to the libraries and library search |
| directories, respectively, because linkers differ on how to specify |
| them. |
| |
| If you specified: |
| lib_switch = "-l" |
| lib_dir_switch = "-L" |
| then the "{{libs}}" expansion for |
| [ "freetype", "expat" ] |
| would be |
| "-lfreetype -lexpat". |
| |
| framework_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| weak_framework_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| framework_dir_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| Valid for: Linker tools |
| |
| These strings will be prepended to the frameworks and framework search |
| path directories, respectively, because linkers differ on how to specify |
| them. |
| |
| If you specified: |
| framework_switch = "-framework " |
| weak_framework_switch = "-weak_framework " |
| framework_dir_switch = "-F" |
| and: |
| framework_dirs = [ "$root_out_dir" ] |
| frameworks = [ "UIKit.framework", "Foo.framework" ] |
| weak_frameworks = [ "MediaPlayer.framework" ] |
| would be: |
| "-F. -framework UIKit -framework Foo -weak_framework MediaPlayer" |
| |
| swiftmodule_switch [string, optional, link tools only] |
| Valid for: Linker tools except "alink" |
| |
| The string will be prependend to the path to the .swiftmodule files |
| that are embedded in the linker output. |
| |
| If you specified: |
| swiftmodule_swift = "-Wl,-add_ast_path," |
| then the "{{swiftmodules}}" expansion for |
| [ "obj/foo/Foo.swiftmodule" ] |
| would be |
| "-Wl,-add_ast_path,obj/foo/Foo.swiftmodule" |
| |
| outputs [list of strings with substitutions] |
| Valid for: Linker and compiler tools (required) |
| |
| An array of names for the output files the tool produces. These are |
| relative to the build output directory. There must always be at least |
| one output file. There can be more than one output (a linker might |
| produce a library and an import library, for example). |
| |
| This array just declares to GN what files the tool will produce. It is |
| your responsibility to specify the tool command that actually produces |
| these files. |
| |
| If you specify more than one output for shared library links, you |
| should consider setting link_output, depend_output, and |
| runtime_outputs. |
| |
| Example for a compiler tool that produces .obj files: |
| outputs = [ |
| "{{source_out_dir}}/{{source_name_part}}.obj" |
| ] |
| |
| Example for a linker tool that produces a .dll and a .lib. The use of |
| {{target_output_name}}, {{output_extension}} and {{output_dir}} allows |
| the target to override these values. |
| outputs = [ |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}{{output_extension}}", |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}.lib", |
| ] |
| |
| partial_outputs [list of strings with substitutions] |
| Valid for: "swift" only |
| |
| An array of names for the partial outputs the tool produces. These |
| are relative to the build output directory. The expansion will be |
| evaluated for each file listed in the "sources" of the target. |
| |
| This is used to deal with whole module optimization, allowing to |
| list one object file per source file when whole module optimization |
| is disabled. |
| |
| pool [label, optional] |
| Valid for: all tools (optional) |
| |
| Label of the pool to use for the tool. Pools are used to limit the |
| number of tasks that can execute concurrently during the build. |
| |
| See also "gn help pool". |
| |
| link_output [string with substitutions] |
| depend_output [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: "solink" only (optional) |
| |
| These two files specify which of the outputs from the solink tool |
| should be used for linking and dependency tracking. These should match |
| entries in the "outputs". If unspecified, the first item in the |
| "outputs" array will be used for all. See "Separate linking and |
| dependencies for shared libraries" below for more. |
| |
| On Windows, where the tools produce a .dll shared library and a .lib |
| import library, you will want the first two to be the import library |
| and the third one to be the .dll file. On Linux, if you're not doing |
| the separate linking/dependency optimization, all of these should be |
| the .so output. |
| |
| output_prefix [string] |
| Valid for: Linker tools (optional) |
| |
| Prefix to use for the output name. Defaults to empty. This prefix will |
| be prepended to the name of the target (or the output_name if one is |
| manually specified for it) if the prefix is not already there. The |
| result will show up in the {{output_name}} substitution pattern. |
| |
| Individual targets can opt-out of the output prefix by setting: |
| output_prefix_override = true |
| (see "gn help output_prefix_override"). |
| |
| This is typically used to prepend "lib" to libraries on |
| Posix systems: |
| output_prefix = "lib" |
| |
| precompiled_header_type [string] |
| Valid for: "cc", "cxx", "objc", "objcxx" |
| |
| Type of precompiled headers. If undefined or the empty string, |
| precompiled headers will not be used for this tool. Otherwise use "gcc" |
| or "msvc". |
| |
| For precompiled headers to be used for a given target, the target (or a |
| config applied to it) must also specify a "precompiled_header" and, for |
| "msvc"-style headers, a "precompiled_source" value. If the type is |
| "gcc", then both "precompiled_header" and "precompiled_source" must |
| resolve to the same file, despite the different formats required for |
| each." |
| |
| See "gn help precompiled_header" for more. |
| |
| restat [boolean] |
| Valid for: all tools (optional, defaults to false) |
| |
| Requests that Ninja check the file timestamp after this tool has run to |
| determine if anything changed. Set this if your tool has the ability to |
| skip writing output if the output file has not changed. |
| |
| Normally, Ninja will assume that when a tool runs the output be new and |
| downstream dependents must be rebuild. When this is set to trye, Ninja |
| can skip rebuilding downstream dependents for input changes that don't |
| actually affect the output. |
| |
| Example: |
| restat = true |
| |
| rspfile [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: all tools except "action" (optional) |
| |
| Name of the response file. If empty, no response file will be |
| used. See "rspfile_content". |
| |
| rspfile_content [string with substitutions] |
| Valid for: all tools except "action" (required when "rspfile" is used) |
| |
| The contents to be written to the response file. This may include all |
| or part of the command to send to the tool which allows you to get |
| around OS command-line length limits. |
| |
| This example adds the inputs and libraries to a response file, but |
| passes the linker flags directly on the command line: |
| tool("link") { |
| command = "link -o {{output}} {{ldflags}} @{{output}}.rsp" |
| rspfile = "{{output}}.rsp" |
| rspfile_content = "{{inputs}} {{solibs}} {{libs}} {{rlibs}}" |
| } |
| |
| runtime_outputs [string list with substitutions] |
| Valid for: linker tools |
| |
| If specified, this list is the subset of the outputs that should be |
| added to runtime deps (see "gn help runtime_deps"). By default (if |
| runtime_outputs is empty or unspecified), it will be the link_output. |
| |
| rust_sysroot |
| Valid for: Rust tools |
| |
| A path relative to root_out_dir. This is not used in the build |
| process, but may be used when generating metadata for rust-analyzer. |
| (See --export-rust-project). It enables such metadata to include |
| information about the Rust standard library. |
| |
| dynamic_link_switch |
| Valid for: Rust tools which link |
| |
| A switch to be optionally inserted into linker command lines |
| to indicate that subsequent items may be dynamically linked. |
| For ld-like linkers, -Clink-arg=-Bdynamic may be a good choice. |
| This switch is inserted by gn into rustc command lines before |
| listing any non-Rust dependencies. This may be necessary because |
| sometimes rustc puts the linker into a mode where it would otherwise |
| link against static libraries by default. This flag will be |
| inserted into the {{rustdeps}} variable at the appropriate place; |
| {{ldflags}} can't be used for the same purpose because the flags |
| may not be inserted at the desired place in the command line. |
| |
| )" // String break to prevent overflowing the 16K max VC string length. |
| R"(Expansions for tool variables |
| |
| All paths are relative to the root build directory, which is the current |
| directory for running all tools. These expansions are available to all tools: |
| |
| {{label}} |
| The label of the current target. This is typically used in the |
| "description" field for link tools. The toolchain will be omitted from |
| the label for targets in the default toolchain, and will be included |
| for targets in other toolchains. |
| |
| {{label_name}} |
| The short name of the label of the target. This is the part after the |
| colon. For "//foo/bar:baz" this will be "baz". Unlike |
| {{target_output_name}}, this is not affected by the "output_prefix" in |
| the tool or the "output_name" set on the target. |
| |
| {{label_no_toolchain}} |
| The label of the current target, never including the toolchain |
| (otherwise, this is identical to {{label}}). This is used as the module |
| name when using .modulemap files. |
| |
| {{output}} |
| The relative path and name of the output(s) of the current build step. |
| If there is more than one output, this will expand to a list of all of |
| them. Example: "out/base/my_file.o" |
| |
| {{target_gen_dir}} |
| {{target_out_dir}} |
| The directory of the generated file and output directories, |
| respectively, for the current target. There is no trailing slash. See |
| also {{output_dir}} for linker tools. Example: "out/base/test" |
| |
| {{target_output_name}} |
| The short name of the current target with no path information, or the |
| value of the "output_name" variable if one is specified in the target. |
| This will include the "output_prefix" if any. See also {{label_name}}. |
| |
| Example: "libfoo" for the target named "foo" and an output prefix for |
| the linker tool of "lib". |
| |
| Compiler tools have the notion of a single input and a single output, along |
| with a set of compiler-specific flags. The following expansions are |
| available: |
| |
| {{asmflags}} |
| {{cflags}} |
| {{cflags_c}} |
| {{cflags_cc}} |
| {{cflags_objc}} |
| {{cflags_objcc}} |
| {{defines}} |
| {{include_dirs}} |
| Strings correspond that to the processed flags/defines/include |
| directories specified for the target. |
| Example: "--enable-foo --enable-bar" |
| |
| Defines will be prefixed by "-D" and include directories will be |
| prefixed by "-I" (these work with Posix tools as well as Microsoft |
| ones). |
| |
| {{module_deps}} |
| {{module_deps_no_self}} |
| Strings that correspond to the flags necessary to depend upon the Clang |
| modules referenced by the current target. The "_no_self" version doesn't |
| include the module for the current target, and can be used to compile |
| the pcm itself. |
| |
| {{source}} |
| The relative path and name of the current input file. |
| Example: "../../base/my_file.cc" |
| |
| {{source_file_part}} |
| The file part of the source including the extension (with no directory |
| information). |
| Example: "foo.cc" |
| |
| {{source_name_part}} |
| The filename part of the source file with no directory or extension. |
| Example: "foo" |
| |
| {{source_gen_dir}} |
| {{source_out_dir}} |
| The directory in the generated file and output directories, |
| respectively, for the current input file. If the source file is in the |
| same directory as the target is declared in, they will will be the same |
| as the "target" versions above. Example: "gen/base/test" |
| |
| Linker tools have multiple inputs and (potentially) multiple outputs. The |
| static library tool ("alink") is not considered a linker tool. The following |
| expansions are available: |
| |
| {{inputs}} |
| {{inputs_newline}} |
| Expands to the inputs to the link step. This will be a list of object |
| files and static libraries. |
| Example: "obj/foo.o obj/bar.o obj/somelibrary.a" |
| |
| The "_newline" version will separate the input files with newlines |
| instead of spaces. This is useful in response files: some linkers can |
| take a "-filelist" flag which expects newline separated files, and some |
| Microsoft tools have a fixed-sized buffer for parsing each line of a |
| response file. |
| |
| {{ldflags}} |
| Expands to the processed set of ldflags and library search paths |
| specified for the target. |
| Example: "-m64 -fPIC -pthread -L/usr/local/mylib" |
| |
| {{libs}} |
| Expands to the list of system libraries to link to. Each will be |
| prefixed by the "lib_switch". |
| |
| Example: "-lfoo -lbar" |
| |
| {{output_dir}} |
| The value of the "output_dir" variable in the target, or the the value |
| of the "default_output_dir" value in the tool if the target does not |
| override the output directory. This will be relative to the |
| root_build_dir and will not end in a slash. Will be "." for output to |
| the root_build_dir. |
| |
| This is subtly different than {{target_out_dir}} which is defined by GN |
| based on the target's path and not overridable. {{output_dir}} is for |
| the final output, {{target_out_dir}} is generally for object files and |
| other outputs. |
| |
| Usually {{output_dir}} would be defined in terms of either |
| {{target_out_dir}} or {{root_out_dir}} |
| |
| {{output_extension}} |
| The value of the "output_extension" variable in the target, or the |
| value of the "default_output_extension" value in the tool if the target |
| does not specify an output extension. |
| Example: ".so" |
| |
| {{solibs}} |
| Extra libraries from shared library dependencies not specified in the |
| {{inputs}}. This is the list of link_output files from shared libraries |
| (if the solink tool specifies a "link_output" variable separate from |
| the "depend_output"). |
| |
| These should generally be treated the same as libs by your tool. |
| |
| Example: "libfoo.so libbar.so" |
| |
| {{rlibs}} |
| Any Rust .rlibs which need to be linked into a final C++ target. |
| These should be treated as {{inputs}} except that sometimes |
| they might have different linker directives applied. |
| |
| Example: "obj/foo/libfoo.rlib" |
| |
| {{frameworks}} |
| Shared libraries packaged as framework bundle. This is principally |
| used on Apple's platforms (macOS and iOS). All name must be ending |
| with ".framework" suffix; the suffix will be stripped when expanding |
| {{frameworks}} and each item will be preceded by "-framework" or |
| "-weak_framework". |
| |
| {{swiftmodules}} |
| Swift .swiftmodule files that needs to be embedded into the binary. |
| This is necessary to correctly link with object generated by the |
| Swift compiler (the .swiftmodule file cannot be embedded in object |
| files directly). Those will be prefixed with "swiftmodule_switch" |
| value. |
| |
| )" // String break to prevent overflowing the 16K max VC string length. |
| R"( The static library ("alink") tool allows {{arflags}} plus the common tool |
| substitutions. |
| |
| The copy tool allows the common compiler/linker substitutions, plus |
| {{source}} which is the source of the copy. The stamp tool allows only the |
| common tool substitutions. |
| |
| The copy_bundle_data and compile_xcassets tools only allows the common tool |
| substitutions. Both tools are required to create iOS/macOS bundles and need |
| only be defined on those platforms. |
| |
| The copy_bundle_data tool will be called with one source and needs to copy |
| (optionally optimizing the data representation) to its output. It may be |
| called with a directory as input and it needs to be recursively copied. |
| |
| The compile_xcassets tool will be called with one or more source (each an |
| asset catalog) that needs to be compiled to a single output. The following |
| substitutions are available: |
| |
| {{inputs}} |
| Expands to the list of .xcassets to use as input to compile the asset |
| catalog. |
| |
| {{bundle_product_type}} |
| Expands to the product_type of the bundle that will contain the |
| compiled asset catalog. Usually corresponds to the product_type |
| property of the corresponding create_bundle target. |
| |
| {{bundle_partial_info_plist}} |
| Expands to the path to the partial Info.plist generated by the |
| assets catalog compiler. Usually based on the target_name of |
| the create_bundle target. |
| |
| {{xcasset_compiler_flags}} |
| Expands to the list of flags specified in corresponding |
| create_bundle target. |
| |
| The inputs for compile_xcassets tool will be found from the bundle_data |
| dependencies by looking for any file matching "*/*.xcassets/*" pattern. |
| The "$assets.xcassets" directory will be added as input to the tool. |
| |
| The Swift tool has multiple input and outputs. It must have exactly one |
| output of .swiftmodule type, but can have one or more object file outputs, |
| in addition to other type of outputs. The following expansions are available: |
| |
| {{module_name}} |
| Expands to the string representing the module name of target under |
| compilation (see "module_name" variable). |
| |
| {{module_dirs}} |
| Expands to the list of -I<path> for the target Swift module search |
| path computed from target dependencies. |
| |
| {{swiftflags}} |
| Expands to the list of strings representing Swift compiler flags. |
| |
| Rust tools have the notion of a single input and a single output, along |
| with a set of compiler-specific flags. The following expansions are |
| available: |
| |
| {{crate_name}} |
| Expands to the string representing the crate name of target under |
| compilation. |
| |
| {{crate_type}} |
| Expands to the string representing the type of crate for the target |
| under compilation. |
| |
| {{externs}} |
| Expands to the list of --extern flags needed to include addition Rust |
| libraries in this target. Includes any specified renamed dependencies. |
| |
| {{rustdeps}} |
| Expands to the list of -Ldependency=<path> strings needed to compile |
| this target. |
| |
| {{rustenv}} |
| Expands to the list of environment variables. |
| |
| {{rustflags}} |
| Expands to the list of strings representing Rust compiler flags. |
| |
| Separate linking and dependencies for shared libraries |
| |
| Shared libraries are special in that not all changes to them require that |
| dependent targets be re-linked. If the shared library is changed but no |
| imports or exports are different, dependent code needn't be relinked, which |
| can speed up the build. |
| |
| If your link step can output a list of exports from a shared library and |
| writes the file only if the new one is different, the timestamp of this file |
| can be used for triggering re-links, while the actual shared library would be |
| used for linking. |
| |
| You will need to specify |
| restat = true |
| in the linker tool to make this work, so Ninja will detect if the timestamp |
| of the dependency file has changed after linking (otherwise it will always |
| assume that running a command updates the output): |
| |
| tool("solink") { |
| command = "..." |
| outputs = [ |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}{{output_extension}}", |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}{{output_extension}}.TOC", |
| ] |
| link_output = |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}{{output_extension}}" |
| depend_output = |
| "{{output_dir}}/{{target_output_name}}{{output_extension}}.TOC" |
| restat = true |
| } |
| |
| Example |
| |
| toolchain("my_toolchain") { |
| # Put these at the top to apply to all tools below. |
| lib_switch = "-l" |
| lib_dir_switch = "-L" |
| |
| tool("cc") { |
| command = "gcc {{source}} -o {{output}}" |
| outputs = [ "{{source_out_dir}}/{{source_name_part}}.o" ] |
| description = "GCC {{source}}" |
| } |
| tool("cxx") { |
| command = "g++ {{source}} -o {{output}}" |
| outputs = [ "{{source_out_dir}}/{{source_name_part}}.o" ] |
| description = "G++ {{source}}" |
| } |
| }; |
| )"; |
| |
| Value RunTool(Scope* scope, |
| const FunctionCallNode* function, |
| const std::vector<Value>& args, |
| BlockNode* block, |
| Err* err) { |
| // Find the toolchain definition we're executing inside of. The toolchain |
| // function will set a property pointing to it that we'll pick up. |
| Toolchain* toolchain = reinterpret_cast<Toolchain*>( |
| scope->GetProperty(&kToolchainPropertyKey, nullptr)); |
| if (!toolchain) { |
| *err = Err(function->function(), "tool() called outside of toolchain().", |
| "The tool() function can only be used inside a toolchain() " |
| "definition."); |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| |
| if (!EnsureSingleStringArg(function, args, err)) |
| return Value(); |
| const std::string& tool_name = args[0].string_value(); |
| |
| // Run the tool block. |
| Scope block_scope(scope); |
| block->Execute(&block_scope, err); |
| if (err->has_error()) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| std::unique_ptr<Tool> tool = |
| Tool::CreateTool(function, tool_name, &block_scope, toolchain, err); |
| |
| if (!tool) { |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| |
| tool->set_defined_from(function); |
| toolchain->SetTool(std::move(tool)); |
| |
| // Make sure there weren't any vars set in this tool that were unused. |
| if (!block_scope.CheckForUnusedVars(err)) |
| return Value(); |
| |
| return Value(); |
| } |
| |
| } // namespace functions |