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  LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
  OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
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<!--

=head1 Variant builds

=head2 Variations on a theme

Other variations of this model are possible. For example, you might decide
that you want to separate out your include files into platform dependent and
platform independent files. In this case, you'd have to define an
alternative to C<$INCLUDE> for platform-dependent files. Most F<Conscript>
files, generating purely platform-independent include files, would not have
to change.

You might also want to be able to compile your whole system with debugging
or profiling, for example, enabled. You could do this with appropriate
command line options, such as C<DEBUG=on>. This would then be translated
into the appropriate platform-specific requirements to enable debugging
(this might include turning off optimization, for example). You could
optionally vary the name space for these different types of systems, but, as
we'll see in the next section, it's not B<essential> to do this, since Cons
is pretty smart about rebuilding things when you change options.

-->

  <para>

  The &variant_dir; keyword argument of
  the &SConscript; function provides everything
  we need to show how easy it is to create
  variant builds using &SCons;.
  Suppose, for example, that we want to
  build a program for both Windows and Linux platforms,
  but that we want to build it in a shared directory
  with separate side-by-side build directories
  for the Windows and Linux versions of the program.

  </para>

  <scons_example name="ex_variants">
    <file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
    platform = ARGUMENTS.get('OS', Platform())

    include = "#export/$PLATFORM/include"
    lib = "#export/$PLATFORM/lib"
    bin = "#export/$PLATFORM/bin"

    env = Environment(PLATFORM = platform,
                      BINDIR = bin,
                      INCDIR = include,
                      LIBDIR = lib,
                      CPPPATH = [include],
                      LIBPATH = [lib],
                      LIBS = 'world')

    Export('env')

    env.SConscript('src/SConscript', variant_dir='build/$PLATFORM')
    </file>
    <directory name="src"></directory>
    <directory name="src/hello"></directory>
    <directory name="src/world"></directory>
    <file name="src/SConscript">
    Import('env')
    SConscript('hello/SConscript')
    SConscript('world/SConscript')
    </file>
    <file name="src/hello/SConscript">
    Import('env')
    hello = env.Program('hello.c')
    env.Install('$BINDIR', hello)
    </file>
    <file name="src/hello/hello.c">
    #include "world.h"
    int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { printf "hello.c\n"; world(); }
    </file>
    <file name="src/world/SConscript">
    Import('env')
    world = env.Library('world.c')
    env.Install('$LIBDIR', world)
    env.Install('$INCDIR', 'world.h')
    </file>
    <file name="src/world/world.h">
    #define STRING "world.h"
    extern int world();
    </file>
    <file name="src/world/world.c">
    int world() { printf "world.c\n"; }
    </file>
  </scons_example>

  <para>

  This SConstruct file,
  when run on a Linux system, yields:

  </para>

  <scons_output example="ex_variants" os="posix">
    <scons_output_command>scons -Q OS=linux</scons_output_command>
  </scons_output>

  <para>

  The same SConstruct file on Windows would build:

  </para>

  <scons_output example="ex_variants" os="win32">
    <scons_output_command>scons -Q OS=windows</scons_output_command>
  </scons_output>

  <!--

  <scons_example name="ex_var2">
    <file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
    env = Environment(OS = ARGUMENTS.get('OS'))
    for os in ['newell', 'post']:
        SConscript('src/SConscript', variant_dir='build/' + os)
    </file>
  </scons_example>

  <scons_output example="ex_var2">
    <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
  </scons_output>

  -->