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diff --git a/doc/user/separate.in b/doc/user/separate.in deleted file mode 100644 index a8d0aab..0000000 --- a/doc/user/separate.in +++ /dev/null @@ -1,540 +0,0 @@ -<!-- - - Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 The SCons Foundation - - Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining - a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the - "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including - without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, - distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to - permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to - the following conditions: - - The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included - in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. - - THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY - KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE - WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND - NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE - LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION - OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION - WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. - ---> - -<!-- - -=head1 Separating source and build trees - -It's often desirable to keep any derived files from the build completely -separate from the source files. This makes it much easier to keep track of -just what is a source file, and also makes it simpler to handle B<variant> -builds, especially if you want the variant builds to co-exist. - -=head2 Separating build and source directories using the Link command - -Cons provides a simple mechanism that handles all of these requirements. The -C<Link> command is invoked as in this example: - - Link 'build' => 'src'; - -The specified directories are ``linked'' to the specified source -directory. Let's suppose that you setup a source directory, F<src>, with the -sub-directories F<world> and F<hello> below it, as in the previous -example. You could then substitute for the original build lines the -following: - - Build qw( - build/world/Conscript - build/hello/Conscript - ); - -Notice that you treat the F<Conscript> file as if it existed in the build -directory. Now if you type the same command as before, you will get the -following results: - - % cons export - Install build/world/world.h as export/include/world.h - cc -Iexport/include -c build/hello/hello.c -o build/hello/hello.o - cc -Iexport/include -c build/world/world.c -o build/world/world.o - ar r build/world/libworld.a build/world/world.o - ar: creating build/world/libworld.a - ranlib build/world/libworld.a - Install build/world/libworld.a as export/lib/libworld.a - cc -o build/hello/hello build/hello/hello.o -Lexport/lib -lworld - Install build/hello/hello as export/bin/hello - -Again, Cons has taken care of the details for you. In particular, you will -notice that all the builds are done using source files and object files from -the build directory. For example, F<build/world/world.o> is compiled from -F<build/world/world.c>, and F<export/include/world.h> is installed from -F<build/world/world.h>. This is accomplished on most systems by the simple -expedient of ``hard'' linking the required files from each source directory -into the appropriate build directory. - -The links are maintained correctly by Cons, no matter what you do to the -source directory. If you modify a source file, your editor may do this ``in -place'' or it may rename it first and create a new file. In the latter case, -any hard link will be lost. Cons will detect this condition the next time -the source file is needed, and will relink it appropriately. - -You'll also notice, by the way, that B<no> changes were required to the -underlying F<Conscript> files. And we can go further, as we shall see in the -next section. - -=head2 Explicit references to the source directory - -When using the C<Link> command on some operating systems or with some -tool chains, it's sometimes useful to have a command actually use -the path name to the source directory, not the build directory. For -example, on systems that must copy, not "hard link," the F<src/> and -F<build/> copies of C<Linked> files, using the F<src/> path of a file -name might make an editor aware that a syntax error must be fixed in the -source directory, not the build directory. - -You can tell Cons that you want to use the "source path" for a file by -preceding the file name with a ``!'' (exclamation point). For example, -if we add a ``!'' to the beginning of a source file: - - Program $env "foo", "!foo.c"; # Notice initial ! on foo.c - -Cons will compile the target as follows: - - cc -c src/foo.c -o build/foo.o - cc -o build/foo build/foo.o - -Notice that Cons has compiled the program from the the F<src/foo.c> -source file. Without the initial ``!'', Cons would have compiled the -program using the F<build/foo.c> path name. - ---> - - <para> - - It's often useful to keep any built files completely - separate from the source files. - In &SCons;, this is usually done by creating one or more separate - <emphasis>variant directory trees</emphasis> - that are used to hold the built objects files, libraries, - and executable programs, etc. - for a specific flavor, or variant, of build. - &SCons; provides two ways to do this, - one through the &SConscript; function that we've already seen, - and the second through a more flexible &VariantDir; function. - - </para> - - <para> - - One historical note: the &VariantDir; function - used to be called &BuildDir;. - That name is still supported - but has been deprecated - because the &SCons; functionality - differs from the model of a "build directory" - implemented by other build systems like the GNU Autotools. - - </para> - - <section> - <title>Specifying a Variant Directory Tree as Part of an &SConscript; Call</title> - - <para> - - The most straightforward way to establish a variant directory tree - uses the fact that the usual way to - set up a build hierarchy is to have an - &SConscript; file in the source subdirectory. - If you then pass a &variant_dir; argument to the - &SConscript; function call: - - </para> - - <scons_example name="ex1"> - <file name="SConstruct" printme="1"> - SConscript('src/SConscript', variant_dir='build') - </file> - <file name="src/SConscript"> - env = Environment() - env.Program('hello.c') - </file> - <file name="src/hello.c"> - int main() { printf("Hello, world!\n"); } - </file> - </scons_example> - - <para> - - &SCons; will then build all of the files in - the &build; subdirectory: - - </para> - - <scons_output example="ex1"> - <scons_output_command>ls src</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>ls build</scons_output_command> - </scons_output> - - <para> - - But wait a minute--what's going on here? - &SCons; created the object file - <filename>build/hello.o</filename> - in the &build; subdirectory, - as expected. - But even though our &hello_c; file lives in the &src; subdirectory, - &SCons; has actually compiled a - <filename>build/hello.c</filename> file - to create the object file. - - </para> - - <para> - - What's happened is that &SCons; has <emphasis>duplicated</emphasis> - the &hello_c; file from the &src; subdirectory - to the &build; subdirectory, - and built the program from there. - The next section explains why &SCons; does this. - - </para> - - </section> - - <section> - <title>Why &SCons; Duplicates Source Files in a Variant Directory Tree</title> - - <para> - - &SCons; duplicates source files in variant directory trees - because it's the most straightforward way to guarantee a correct build - <emphasis>regardless of include-file directory paths, - relative references between files, - or tool support for putting files in different locations</emphasis>, - and the &SCons; philosophy is to, by default, - guarantee a correct build in all cases. - - </para> - - <para> - - The most direct reason to duplicate source files - in variant directories - is simply that some tools (mostly older versions) - are written to only build their output files - in the same directory as the source files. - In this case, the choices are either - to build the output file in the source directory - and move it to the variant directory, - or to duplicate the source files in the variant directory. - - </para> - - <para> - - Additionally, - relative references between files - can cause problems if we don't - just duplicate the hierarchy of source files - in the variant directory. - You can see this at work in - use of the C preprocessor <literal>#include</literal> - mechanism with double quotes, not angle brackets: - - </para> - - <sconstruct> - #include "file.h" - </sconstruct> - - <para> - - The <emphasis>de facto</emphasis> standard behavior - for most C compilers in this case - is to first look in the same directory - as the source file that contains the <literal>#include</literal> line, - then to look in the directories in the preprocessor search path. - Add to this that the &SCons; implementation of - support for code repositories - (described below) - means not all of the files - will be found in the same directory hierarchy, - and the simplest way to make sure - that the right include file is found - is to duplicate the source files into the variant directory, - which provides a correct build - regardless of the original location(s) of the source files. - - </para> - - <para> - - Although source-file duplication guarantees a correct build - even in these end-cases, - it <emphasis>can</emphasis> usually be safely disabled. - The next section describes - how you can disable the duplication of source files - in the variant directory. - - </para> - - </section> - - <section> - <title>Telling &SCons; to Not Duplicate Source Files in the Variant Directory Tree</title> - - <para> - - In most cases and with most tool sets, - &SCons; can place its target files in a build subdirectory - <emphasis>without</emphasis> - duplicating the source files - and everything will work just fine. - You can disable the default &SCons; behavior - by specifying <literal>duplicate=0</literal> - when you call the &SConscript; function: - - </para> - - <sconstruct> - SConscript('src/SConscript', variant_dir='build', duplicate=0) - </sconstruct> - - <para> - - When this flag is specified, - &SCons; uses the variant directory - like most people expect--that is, - the output files are placed in the variant directory - while the source files stay in the source directory: - - </para> - - <screen> - % <userinput>ls src</userinput> - SConscript - hello.c - % <userinput>scons -Q</userinput> - cc -c src/hello.c -o build/hello.o - cc -o build/hello build/hello.o - % <userinput>ls build</userinput> - hello - hello.o - </screen> - - </section> - - <section> - <title>The &VariantDir; Function</title> - - <para> - - Use the &VariantDir; function to establish that target - files should be built in a separate directory - from the source files: - - </para> - - <scons_example name="ex_builddir"> - <file name="SConstruct" printme="1"> - VariantDir('build', 'src') - env = Environment() - env.Program('build/hello.c') - </file> - <file name="src/hello.c"> - int main() { printf("Hello, world!\n"); } - </file> - </scons_example> - - <para> - - Note that when you're not using - an &SConscript; file in the &src; subdirectory, - you must actually specify that - the program must be built from - the <filename>build/hello.c</filename> - file that &SCons; will duplicate in the - &build; subdirectory. - - </para> - - <para> - - When using the &VariantDir; function directly, - &SCons; still duplicates the source files - in the variant directory by default: - - </para> - - <scons_output example="ex_builddir"> - <scons_output_command>ls src</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>ls build</scons_output_command> - </scons_output> - - <para> - - You can specify the same <literal>duplicate=0</literal> argument - that you can specify for an &SConscript; call: - - </para> - - <scons_example name="ex_duplicate_0"> - <file name="SConstruct" printme="1"> - VariantDir('build', 'src', duplicate=0) - env = Environment() - env.Program('build/hello.c') - </file> - <file name="src/hello.c"> - int main() { printf("Hello, world!\n"); } - </file> - </scons_example> - - <para> - - In which case &SCons; - will disable duplication of the source files: - - </para> - - <scons_output example="ex_duplicate_0"> - <scons_output_command>ls src</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>ls build</scons_output_command> - </scons_output> - - </section> - - <section> - <title>Using &VariantDir; With an &SConscript; File</title> - - <para> - - Even when using the &VariantDir; function, - it's much more natural to use it with - a subsidiary &SConscript; file. - For example, if the - <filename>src/SConscript</filename> - looks like this: - - </para> - - <scons_example name="example_builddir_sconscript"> - <file name="SConstruct"> - VariantDir('build', 'src') - SConscript('build/SConscript') - </file> - <file name="src/SConscript" printme="1"> - env = Environment() - env.Program('hello.c') - </file> - <file name="src/hello.c"> - int main() { printf("Hello, world!\n"); } - </file> - </scons_example> - - <para> - - Then our &SConstruct; file could look like: - - </para> - - <scons_example_file example="example_builddir_sconscript" name="SConstruct"> - </scons_example_file> - - <para> - - Yielding the following output: - - </para> - - <scons_output example="example_builddir_sconscript"> - <scons_output_command>ls src</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>ls build</scons_output_command> - </scons_output> - - <para> - - Notice that this is completely equivalent - to the use of &SConscript; that we - learned about in the previous section. - - </para> - - </section> - - <section> - <title>Using &Glob; with &VariantDir;</title> - - <para> - - The &Glob; file name pattern matching function - works just as usual when using &VariantDir;. - For example, if the - <filename>src/SConscript</filename> - looks like this: - - </para> - - <scons_example name="example_glob_builddir_sconscript"> - <file name="SConstruct"> - VariantDir('build', 'src') - SConscript('build/SConscript') - </file> - <file name="src/SConscript" printme="1"> - env = Environment() - env.Program('hello', Glob('*.c')) - </file> - <file name="src/f1.c"> - #include "f2.h" - int main() { printf(f2()); } - </file> - <file name="src/f2.c"> - const char * f2() { return("Hello, world!\n"); } - </file> - <file name="src/f2.h"> - const char * f2(); - </file> - </scons_example> - - <para> - - Then with the same &SConstruct; file as in the previous section, - and source files <filename>f1.c</filename> - and <filename>f2.c</filename> in src, - we would see the following output: - - </para> - - <scons_output example="example_glob_builddir_sconscript"> - <scons_output_command>ls src</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command> - <scons_output_command>ls build</scons_output_command> - </scons_output> - - <para> - - The &Glob; function returns Nodes in the - <filename>build/</filename> tree, as you'd expect. - - </para> - - </section> - - <!-- - - <section> - <title>Why You'd Want to Call &VariantDir; Instead of &SConscript;</title> - - <para> - - XXX why call VariantDir() instead of SConscript(variant_dir=) - - </para> - - </section> - - --> |