// 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 #include #include #include #include "tools/gn/err.h" #include "tools/gn/functions.h" #include "tools/gn/label.h" #include "tools/gn/label_ptr.h" #include "tools/gn/parse_tree.h" #include "tools/gn/scheduler.h" #include "tools/gn/scope.h" #include "tools/gn/settings.h" #include "tools/gn/tool.h" #include "tools/gn/toolchain.h" #include "tools/gn/value_extractors.h" #include "tools/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; bool ReadBool(Scope* scope, const char* var, Tool* tool, void (Tool::*set)(bool), Err* err) { const Value* v = scope->GetValue(var, true); if (!v) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!v->VerifyTypeIs(Value::BOOLEAN, err)) return false; (tool->*set)(v->boolean_value()); return true; } // Reads the given string from the scope (if present) and puts the result into // dest. If the value is not a string, sets the error and returns false. bool ReadString(Scope* scope, const char* var, Tool* tool, void (Tool::*set)(std::string), Err* err) { const Value* v = scope->GetValue(var, true); if (!v) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!v->VerifyTypeIs(Value::STRING, err)) return false; (tool->*set)(v->string_value()); return true; } // Reads the given label from the scope (if present) and puts the result into // dest. If the value is not a label, sets the error and returns false. bool ReadLabel(Scope* scope, const char* var, Tool* tool, const Label& current_toolchain, void (Tool::*set)(LabelPtrPair), Err* err) { const Value* v = scope->GetValue(var, true); if (!v) return true; // Not present is fine. Label label = Label::Resolve(scope->GetSourceDir(), current_toolchain, *v, err); if (err->has_error()) return false; LabelPtrPair pair(label); pair.origin = tool->defined_from(); (tool->*set)(std::move(pair)); return true; } // Calls the given validate function on each type in the list. On failure, // sets the error, blame the value, and return false. bool ValidateSubstitutionList(const std::vector& list, bool (*validate)(SubstitutionType), const Value* origin, Err* err) { for (const auto& cur_type : list) { if (!validate(cur_type)) { *err = Err(*origin, "Pattern not valid here.", "You used the pattern " + std::string(kSubstitutionNames[cur_type]) + " which is not valid\nfor this variable."); return false; } } return true; } bool ReadPattern(Scope* scope, const char* name, bool (*validate)(SubstitutionType), Tool* tool, void (Tool::*set)(SubstitutionPattern), Err* err) { const Value* value = scope->GetValue(name, true); if (!value) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!value->VerifyTypeIs(Value::STRING, err)) return false; SubstitutionPattern pattern; if (!pattern.Parse(*value, err)) return false; if (!ValidateSubstitutionList(pattern.required_types(), validate, value, err)) return false; (tool->*set)(std::move(pattern)); return true; } bool ReadPatternList(Scope* scope, const char* name, bool (*validate)(SubstitutionType), Tool* tool, void (Tool::*set)(SubstitutionList), Err* err) { const Value* value = scope->GetValue(name, true); if (!value) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!value->VerifyTypeIs(Value::LIST, err)) return false; SubstitutionList list; if (!list.Parse(*value, err)) return false; // Validate the right kinds of patterns are used. if (!ValidateSubstitutionList(list.required_types(), validate, value, err)) return false; (tool->*set)(std::move(list)); return true; } bool ReadOutputExtension(Scope* scope, Tool* tool, Err* err) { const Value* value = scope->GetValue("default_output_extension", true); if (!value) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!value->VerifyTypeIs(Value::STRING, err)) return false; if (value->string_value().empty()) return true; // Accept empty string. if (value->string_value()[0] != '.') { *err = Err(*value, "default_output_extension must begin with a '.'"); return false; } tool->set_default_output_extension(value->string_value()); return true; } bool ReadPrecompiledHeaderType(Scope* scope, Tool* tool, Err* err) { const Value* value = scope->GetValue("precompiled_header_type", true); if (!value) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!value->VerifyTypeIs(Value::STRING, err)) return false; if (value->string_value().empty()) return true; // Accept empty string, do nothing (default is "no PCH"). if (value->string_value() == "gcc") { tool->set_precompiled_header_type(Tool::PCH_GCC); return true; } else if (value->string_value() == "msvc") { tool->set_precompiled_header_type(Tool::PCH_MSVC); return true; } *err = Err(*value, "Invalid precompiled_header_type", "Must either be empty, \"gcc\", or \"msvc\"."); return false; } bool ReadDepsFormat(Scope* scope, Tool* tool, Err* err) { const Value* value = scope->GetValue("depsformat", true); if (!value) return true; // Not present is fine. if (!value->VerifyTypeIs(Value::STRING, err)) return false; if (value->string_value() == "gcc") { tool->set_depsformat(Tool::DEPS_GCC); } else if (value->string_value() == "msvc") { tool->set_depsformat(Tool::DEPS_MSVC); } else { *err = Err(*value, "Deps format must be \"gcc\" or \"msvc\"."); return false; } return true; } bool IsCompilerTool(Toolchain::ToolType type) { return type == Toolchain::TYPE_CC || type == Toolchain::TYPE_CXX || type == Toolchain::TYPE_OBJC || type == Toolchain::TYPE_OBJCXX || type == Toolchain::TYPE_RC || type == Toolchain::TYPE_ASM; } bool IsLinkerTool(Toolchain::ToolType type) { // "alink" is not counted as in the generic "linker" tool list. return type == Toolchain::TYPE_SOLINK || type == Toolchain::TYPE_SOLINK_MODULE || type == Toolchain::TYPE_LINK; } bool IsPatternInOutputList(const SubstitutionList& output_list, const SubstitutionPattern& pattern) { for (const auto& cur : output_list.list()) { if (pattern.ranges().size() == cur.ranges().size() && std::equal(pattern.ranges().begin(), pattern.ranges().end(), cur.ranges().begin())) return true; } return false; } bool ValidateOutputs(const Tool* tool, Err* err) { if (tool->outputs().list().empty()) { *err = Err(tool->defined_from(), "\"outputs\" must be specified for this tool."); return false; } return true; } // Validates either link_output or depend_output. To generalize to either, pass // the associated pattern, and the variable name that should appear in error // messages. bool ValidateLinkAndDependOutput(const Tool* tool, Toolchain::ToolType tool_type, const SubstitutionPattern& pattern, const char* variable_name, Err* err) { if (pattern.empty()) return true; // Empty is always OK. // It should only be specified for certain tool types. if (tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_SOLINK && tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_SOLINK_MODULE) { *err = Err(tool->defined_from(), "This tool specifies a " + std::string(variable_name) + ".", "This is only valid for solink and solink_module tools."); return false; } if (!IsPatternInOutputList(tool->outputs(), pattern)) { *err = Err(tool->defined_from(), "This tool's link_output is bad.", "It must match one of the outputs."); return false; } return true; } bool ValidateRuntimeOutputs(const Tool* tool, Toolchain::ToolType tool_type, Err* err) { if (tool->runtime_outputs().list().empty()) return true; // Empty is always OK. if (!IsLinkerTool(tool_type)) { *err = Err(tool->defined_from(), "This tool specifies runtime_outputs.", "This is only valid for linker tools (alink doesn't count)."); return false; } for (const SubstitutionPattern& pattern : tool->runtime_outputs().list()) { if (!IsPatternInOutputList(tool->outputs(), pattern)) { *err = Err(tool->defined_from(), "This tool's runtime_outputs is bad.", "It must be a subset of the outputs. The bad one is:\n " + pattern.AsString()); return false; } } return true; } } // 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 arguements 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 commands to run for a given step. See "gn help tool". toolchain_args 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. deps 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& 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(); // 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 = std::make_unique(scope->settings(), label); 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( *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; } 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 types Compiler tools: "cc": C compiler "cxx": C++ compiler "objc": Objective C compiler "objcxx": Objective C++ compiler "rc": Resource compiler (Windows .rc files) "asm": Assembler 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. Tool variables command [string with substitutions] Valid for: all tools except "action" (required) The command to run. 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}}" 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 specify them. If you specified: lib_switch = "-l" lib_dir_switch = "-L" then the "{{libs}}" expansion for [ "freetype", "expat"] would be "-lfreetype -lexpat". 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", ] 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}}" } 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. 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. {{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". )" // String break to prevent overflowing the 16K max VC string length. R"( 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). {{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". As a special case to support Mac, libraries with names ending in ".framework" will be added to the {{libs}} with "-framework" preceeding it, and the lib prefix will be ignored. 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 dependencide 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" )" // 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 avaiable: {{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. 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& 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( 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(); Toolchain::ToolType tool_type = Toolchain::ToolNameToType(tool_name); if (tool_type == Toolchain::TYPE_NONE) { *err = Err(args[0], "Unknown tool type"); return Value(); } // Run the tool block. Scope block_scope(scope); block->Execute(&block_scope, err); if (err->has_error()) return Value(); // Figure out which validator to use for the substitution pattern for this // tool type. There are different validators for the "outputs" than for the // rest of the strings. bool (*subst_validator)(SubstitutionType) = nullptr; bool (*subst_output_validator)(SubstitutionType) = nullptr; if (IsCompilerTool(tool_type)) { subst_validator = &IsValidCompilerSubstitution; subst_output_validator = &IsValidCompilerOutputsSubstitution; } else if (IsLinkerTool(tool_type)) { subst_validator = &IsValidLinkerSubstitution; subst_output_validator = &IsValidLinkerOutputsSubstitution; } else if (tool_type == Toolchain::TYPE_ALINK) { subst_validator = &IsValidALinkSubstitution; // ALink uses the standard output file patterns as other linker tools. subst_output_validator = &IsValidLinkerOutputsSubstitution; } else if (tool_type == Toolchain::TYPE_COPY || tool_type == Toolchain::TYPE_COPY_BUNDLE_DATA) { subst_validator = &IsValidCopySubstitution; subst_output_validator = &IsValidCopySubstitution; } else if (tool_type == Toolchain::TYPE_COMPILE_XCASSETS) { subst_validator = &IsValidCompileXCassetsSubstitution; subst_output_validator = &IsValidCompileXCassetsSubstitution; } else { subst_validator = &IsValidToolSubstitution; subst_output_validator = &IsValidToolSubstitution; } std::unique_ptr tool = std::make_unique(); tool->set_defined_from(function); if (!ReadPattern(&block_scope, "command", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_command, err) || !ReadOutputExtension(&block_scope, tool.get(), err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "depfile", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_depfile, err) || !ReadDepsFormat(&block_scope, tool.get(), err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "description", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_description, err) || !ReadString(&block_scope, "lib_switch", tool.get(), &Tool::set_lib_switch, err) || !ReadString(&block_scope, "lib_dir_switch", tool.get(), &Tool::set_lib_dir_switch, err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "link_output", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_link_output, err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "depend_output", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_depend_output, err) || !ReadPatternList(&block_scope, "runtime_outputs", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_runtime_outputs, err) || !ReadString(&block_scope, "output_prefix", tool.get(), &Tool::set_output_prefix, err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "default_output_dir", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_default_output_dir, err) || !ReadPrecompiledHeaderType(&block_scope, tool.get(), err) || !ReadBool(&block_scope, "restat", tool.get(), &Tool::set_restat, err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "rspfile", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_rspfile, err) || !ReadPattern(&block_scope, "rspfile_content", subst_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_rspfile_content, err) || !ReadLabel(&block_scope, "pool", tool.get(), toolchain->label(), &Tool::set_pool, err)) { return Value(); } if (tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_COPY && tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_STAMP && tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_COPY_BUNDLE_DATA && tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_COMPILE_XCASSETS && tool_type != Toolchain::TYPE_ACTION) { // All tools should have outputs, except the copy, stamp, copy_bundle_data // compile_xcassets and action tools that generate their outputs internally. if (!ReadPatternList(&block_scope, "outputs", subst_output_validator, tool.get(), &Tool::set_outputs, err) || !ValidateOutputs(tool.get(), err)) return Value(); } if (!ValidateRuntimeOutputs(tool.get(), tool_type, err)) return Value(); // Validate link_output and depend_output. if (!ValidateLinkAndDependOutput(tool.get(), tool_type, tool->link_output(), "link_output", err)) return Value(); if (!ValidateLinkAndDependOutput(tool.get(), tool_type, tool->depend_output(), "depend_output", err)) return Value(); if ((!tool->link_output().empty() && tool->depend_output().empty()) || (tool->link_output().empty() && !tool->depend_output().empty())) { *err = Err(function, "Both link_output and depend_output should either " "be specified or they should both be empty."); return Value(); } // Make sure there weren't any vars set in this tool that were unused. if (!block_scope.CheckForUnusedVars(err)) return Value(); toolchain->SetTool(tool_type, std::move(tool)); return Value(); } } // namespace functions