321 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
321 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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short-description: Setting up cross-compilation
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...
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# Cross compilation
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Meson has full support for cross compilation. Since cross compiling is
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more complicated than native building, let's first go over some
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nomenclature. The three most important definitions are traditionally
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called *build*, *host* and *target*. This is confusing because those
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terms are used for quite many different things. To simplify the issue,
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we are going to call these the *build machine*, *host machine* and
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*target machine*. Their definitions are the following:
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* *build machine* is the computer that is doing the actual compiling.
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* *host machine* is the machine on which the compiled binary will run.
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* *target machine* is the machine on which the compiled binary's
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output will run, *only meaningful* if the program produces
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machine-specific output.
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The `tl/dr` summary is the following: if you are doing regular cross
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compilation, you only care about `build_machine` and
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`host_machine`. Just ignore `target_machine` altogether and you will
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be correct 99% of the time. Only compilers and similar tools care
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about the target machine. In fact, for so-called "multi-target" tools
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the target machine need not be fixed at build-time like the others but
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chosen at runtime, so `target_machine` *still* doesn't matter. If your
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needs are more complex or you are interested in the actual details, do
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read on.
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This might be easier to understand through examples. Let's start with
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the regular, not cross-compiling case. In these cases all of these
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three machines are the same. Simple so far.
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Let's next look at the most common cross-compilation setup. Let's
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suppose you are on a 64 bit OSX machine and you are cross compiling a
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binary that will run on a 32 bit ARM Linux board. In this case your
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*build machine* is 64 bit OSX and both your *host* and *target
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machines* are 32 bit ARM Linux. This should be quite understandable as
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well.
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It gets a bit trickier when we think about how the cross compiler was
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generated. It was built and it runs on a specific platform but the
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output it generates is for a different platform. In this case *build*
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and *host machines* are the same, but *target machine* is different.
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The most complicated case is when you cross-compile a cross
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compiler. As an example you can, on a Linux machine, generate a cross
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compiler that runs on Windows but produces binaries on MIPS Linux. In
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this case *build machine* is x86 Linux, *host machine* is x86 Windows
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and *target machine* is MIPS Linux. This setup is known as the
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[Canadian
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Cross](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_compiler#Canadian_Cross). As
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a side note, be careful when reading cross compilation articles on
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Wikipedia or the net in general. It is very common for them to get
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build, host and target mixed up, even in consecutive sentences, which
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can leave you puzzled until you figure it out.
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A lot of confusion stems from the fact that when you cross-compile
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something, the 3 systems (*build*, *host*, and *target*) used when
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building the cross compiler don't align with the ones used when
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building something with that newly-built cross compiler. To take our
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Canadian Cross scenario from above (for full generality), since its
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*host machine* is x86 Windows, the *build machine* of anything we
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build with it is *x86 Windows*. And since its *target machine* is MIPS
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Linux, the *host machine* of anything we build with it is *MIPS
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Linux*. Only the *target machine* of whatever we build with it can be
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freely chosen by us, say if we want to build another cross compiler
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that runs on MIPS Linux and targets Aarch64 iOS. As this example
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hopefully makes clear to you, the platforms are shifted over to the
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left by one position.
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If you did not understand all of the details, don't worry. For most
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people it takes a while to wrap their head around these
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concepts. Don't panic, it might take a while to click, but you will
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get the hang of it eventually.
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## Defining the environment
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Meson requires you to write a cross build definition file. It defines
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various properties of the cross build environment. The cross file
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consists of different sections. The first one is the list of
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executables that we are going to use. A sample snippet might look like
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this:
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```ini
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[binaries]
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c = '/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-gcc'
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cpp = '/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-g++'
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ar = '/usr/i586-mingw32msvc/bin/ar'
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strip = '/usr/i586-mingw32msvc/bin/strip'
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pkgconfig = '/usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-pkg-config'
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exe_wrapper = 'wine' # A command used to run generated executables.
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```
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The entries are pretty self explanatory but the last line is
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special. It defines a *wrapper command* that can be used to run
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executables for this host. In this case we can use Wine, which runs
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Windows applications on Linux. Other choices include running the
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application with qemu or a hardware simulator. If you have this kind
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of a wrapper, these lines are all you need to write. Meson will
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automatically use the given wrapper when it needs to run host
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binaries. This happens e.g. when running the project's test suite.
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The next section lists properties of the cross compiler and its target
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system, and thus properties of host system of what we're building. It
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looks like this:
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```ini
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[properties]
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sizeof_int = 4
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sizeof_wchar_t = 4
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sizeof_void* = 4
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alignment_char = 1
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alignment_void* = 4
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alignment_double = 4
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has_function_printf = true
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c_args = ['-DCROSS=1', '-DSOMETHING=3']
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c_link_args = ['-some_link_arg']
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```
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In most cases you don't need the size and alignment settings, Meson
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will detect all these by compiling and running some sample
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programs. If your build requires some piece of data that is not listed
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here, Meson will stop and write an error message describing how to fix
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the issue. If you need extra compiler arguments to be used during
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cross compilation you can set them with `[langname]_args =
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[args]`. Just remember to specify the args as an array and not as a
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single string (i.e. not as `'-DCROSS=1 -DSOMETHING=3'`).
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One important thing to note, if you did not define an `exe_wrapper` in
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the previous section, is that Meson will make a best-effort guess at
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whether it can run the generated binaries on the build machine. It
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determines whether this is possible by looking at the `system` and
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`cpu_family` of build vs host. There will however be cases where they
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do match up, but the build machine is actually not compatible with the
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host machine. Typically this will happen if the libc used by the build
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and host machines are incompatible, or the code relies on kernel
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features not available on the build machine. One concrete example is a
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macOS build machine producing binaries for an iOS Simulator x86-64
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host. They're both `darwin` and the same architecture, but their
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binaries are not actually compatible. In such cases you may use the
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`needs_exe_wrapper` property to override the auto-detection:
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```ini
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[properties]
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needs_exe_wrapper = true
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```
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The next bit is the definition of host and target machines. Every
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cross build definition must have one or both of them. If it had
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neither, the build would not be a cross build but a native build. You
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do not need to define the build machine, as all necessary information
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about it is extracted automatically. The definitions for host and
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target machines look the same. Here is a sample for host machine.
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```ini
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[host_machine]
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system = 'windows'
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cpu_family = 'x86'
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cpu = 'i686'
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endian = 'little'
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```
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These values define the machines sufficiently for cross compilation
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purposes. The corresponding target definition would look the same but
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have `target_machine` in the header. These values are available in
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your Meson scripts. There are three predefined variables called,
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surprisingly, `build_machine`, `host_machine` and
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`target_machine`. Determining the operating system of your host
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machine is simply a matter of calling `host_machine.system()`.
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There are two different values for the CPU. The first one is
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`cpu_family`. It is a general type of the CPU. Common values might
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include `x86`, `arm` or `x86_64`. The second value is `cpu` which is a
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more specific subtype for the CPU. Typical values for a `x86` CPU
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family might include `i386` or `i586` and for `arm` family `armv5` or
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`armv7hl`. Note that CPU type strings are very system dependent. You
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might get a different value if you check its value on the same machine
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but with different operating systems.
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If you do not define your host machine, it is assumed to be the build
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machine. Similarly if you do not specify target machine, it is assumed
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to be the host machine.
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Additionally, you can define the paths that you want to install to in your
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cross file. This may be especially useful when cross compiling an entire
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operating system, or for operating systems to use internally for consistency.
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```ini
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[paths]
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prefix = '/my/prefix'
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libdir = 'lib/i386-linux-gnu'
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bindir = 'bin'
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```
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This will be overwritten by any options passed on the command line.
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## Starting a cross build
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Once you have the cross file, starting a build is simple
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```console
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$ meson srcdir builddir --cross-file cross_file.txt
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```
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Once configuration is done, compilation is started by invoking Ninja
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in the usual way.
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## Introspection and system checks
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The main *meson* object provides two functions to determine cross
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compilation status.
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```meson
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meson.is_cross_build() # returns true when cross compiling
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meson.has_exe_wrapper() # returns true if an exe wrapper has been defined
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```
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Note that the latter gives undefined return value when doing a native
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build.
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You can run system checks on both the system compiler or the cross
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compiler. You just have to specify which one to use.
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```meson
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build_compiler = meson.get_compiler('c', native : true)
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host_compiler = meson.get_compiler('c', native : false)
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build_int_size = build_compiler.sizeof('int')
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host_int_size = host_compiler.sizeof('int')
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```
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## Mixing host and build targets
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Sometimes you need to build a tool which is used to generate source
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files. These are then compiled for the actual target. For this you
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would want to build some targets with the system's native
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compiler. This requires only one extra keyword argument.
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```meson
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native_exe = executable('mygen', 'mygen.c', native : true)
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```
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You can then take `native_exe` and use it as part of a generator rule or anything else you might want.
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## Using a custom standard library
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Sometimes in cross compilation you need to build your own standard
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library instead of using the one provided by the compiler. Meson has
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built-in support for switching standard libraries transparently. The
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invocation to use in your cross file is the following:
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```ini
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[properties]
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c_stdlib = ['mylibc', 'mylibc_dep'] # Subproject name, dependency name
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```
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This specifies that C standard library is provided in the Meson
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subproject `mylibc` in internal dependency variable `mylibc_dep`. It
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is used on every cross built C target in the entire source tree
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(including subprojects) and the standard library is disabled. The
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build definitions of these targets do not need any modification.
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## Changing cross file settings
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Cross file settings are only read when the build directory is set up
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the first time. Any changes to them after the fact will be
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ignored. This is the same as regular compiles where you can't change
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the compiler once a build tree has been set up. If you need to edit
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your cross file, then you need to wipe your build tree and recreate it
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from scratch.
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## Custom data
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You can store arbitrary data in `properties` and access them from your
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Meson files. As an example if you cross file has this:
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```ini
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[properties]
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somekey = 'somevalue'
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```
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then you can access that using the `meson` object like this:
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```meson
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myvar = meson.get_cross_property('somekey')
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# myvar now has the value 'somevalue'
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```
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## Cross file locations
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As of version 0.44.0 meson supports loading cross files from system locations
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(except on Windows). This will be $XDG_DATA_DIRS/meson/cross, or if
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XDG_DATA_DIRS is undefined, then /usr/local/share/meson/cross and
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/usr/share/meson/cross will be tried in that order, for system wide cross
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files. User local files can be put in $XDG_DATA_HOME/meson/cross, or
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~/.local/share/meson/cross if that is undefined.
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The order of locations tried is as follows:
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- A file relative to the local dir
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- The user local location
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- The system wide locations in order
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Distributions are encouraged to ship cross files either with
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their cross compiler toolchain packages or as a standalone package, and put
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them in one of the system paths referenced above.
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These files can be loaded automatically without adding a path to the cross
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file. For example, if a ~/.local/share/meson/cross contains a file called x86-linux,
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then the following command would start a cross build using that cross files:
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```sh
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meson builddir/ --cross-file x86-linux
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```
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