--- short-description: Build options to configure project properties ... # Build options Most non-trivial builds require user-settable options. As an example a program may have two different data backends that are selectable at build time. Meson provides for this by having a option definition file. Its name is `meson_options.txt` and it is placed at the root of your source tree. Here is a simple option file. ```meson option('someoption', type : 'string', value : 'optval', description : 'An option') option('other_one', type : 'boolean', value : false) option('combo_opt', type : 'combo', choices : ['one', 'two', 'three'], value : 'three') option('integer_opt', type : 'integer', min : 0, max : 5, value : 3) # Since 0.45.0 option('free_array_opt', type : 'array', value : ['one', 'two']) # Since 0.44.0 option('array_opt', type : 'array', choices : ['one', 'two', 'three'], value : ['one', 'two']) option('some_feature', type : 'feature', value : 'enabled') # Since 0.47.0 option('long_desc', type : 'string', value : 'optval', description : 'An option with a very long description' + 'that does something in a specific context') # Since 0.55.0 ``` For built-in options, see [Built-in options][builtin_opts]. ## Build option types All types allow a `description` value to be set describing the option, if no description is set then the name of the option will be used instead. ### Strings The string type is a free form string. If the default value is not set then an empty string will be used as the default. ### Booleans Booleans may have values of either `true` or `false`. If no default value is supplied then `true` will be used as the default. ### Combos A combo allows any one of the values in the `choices` parameter to be selected. If no default value is set then the first value will be the default. ### Integers An integer option contains a single integer with optional upper and lower values that are specified with the `min` and `max` keyword arguments. This type is available since Meson version 0.45.0. ### Arrays Arrays represent an array of strings. By default the array can contain arbitrary strings. To limit the possible values that can used set the `choices` parameter. Meson will then only allow the value array to contain strings that are in the given list. The array may be empty. The `value` parameter specifies the default value of the option and if it is unset then the values of `choices` will be used as the default. As of 0.47.0 -Dopt= and -Dopt=[] both pass an empty list, before this -Dopt= would pass a list with an empty string. This type is available since version 0.44.0 ### Features A `feature` option has three states: `enabled`, `disabled` or `auto`. It is intended to be passed as value for the `required` keyword argument of most functions. Currently supported in [`dependency()`](Reference-manual.md#dependency), [`find_library()`](Reference-manual.md#compiler-object), [`find_program()`](Reference-manual.md#find_program) and [`add_languages()`](Reference-manual.md#add_languages) functions. - `enabled` is the same as passing `required : true`. - `auto` is the same as passing `required : false`. - `disabled` do not look for the dependency and always return 'not-found'. When getting the value of this type of option using `get_option()`, a special [feature option object](Reference-manual.md#feature-option-object) is returned instead of the string representation of the option's value. This object can be passed to `required`: ```meson d = dependency('foo', required : get_option('myfeature')) if d.found() app = executable('myapp', 'main.c', dependencies : [d]) endif ``` To check the value of the feature, the object has three methods returning a boolean and taking no argument: - `.enabled()` - `.disabled()` - `.auto()` This is useful for custom code depending on the feature: ```meson if get_option('myfeature').enabled() # ... endif ``` If the value of a `feature` option is set to `auto`, that value is overridden by the global `auto_features` option (which defaults to `auto`). This is intended to be used by packagers who want to have full control on which dependencies are required and which are disabled, and not rely on build-deps being installed (at the right version) to get a feature enabled. They could set `auto_features=enabled` to enable all features and disable explicitly only the few they don't want, if any. This type is available since version 0.47.0 ## Using build options ```meson optval = get_option('opt_name') ``` This function also allows you to query the value of Meson's built-in project options. For example, to get the installation prefix you would issue the following command: ```meson prefix = get_option('prefix') ``` It should be noted that you can not set option values in your Meson scripts. They have to be set externally with the `meson configure` command line tool. Running `meson configure` without arguments in a build dir shows you all options you can set. To change their values use the `-D` option: ```console $ meson configure -Doption=newvalue ``` Setting the value of arrays is a bit special. If you only pass a single string, then it is considered to have all values separated by commas. Thus invoking the following command: ```console $ meson configure -Darray_opt=foo,bar ``` would set the value to an array of two elements, `foo` and `bar`. If you need to have commas in your string values, then you need to pass the value with proper shell quoting like this: ```console $ meson configure "-Doption=['a,b', 'c,d']" ``` The inner values must always be single quotes and the outer ones double quotes. To change values in subprojects prepend the name of the subproject and a colon: ```console $ meson configure -Dsubproject:option=newvalue ``` **NOTE:** If you cannot call `meson configure` you likely have a old version of Meson. In that case you can call `mesonconf` instead, but that is deprecated in newer versions ## Yielding to superproject option Suppose you have a master project and a subproject. In some cases it might be useful to have an option that has the same value in both of them. This can be achieved with the `yield` keyword. Suppose you have an option definition like this: ```meson option('some_option', type : 'string', value : 'value', yield : true) ``` If you build this project on its own, this option behaves like usual. However if you build this project as a subproject of another project which also has an option called `some_option`, then calling `get_option` returns the value of the superproject. If the value of `yield` is `false`, `get_option` returns the value of the subproject's option. ## Built-in build options There are a number of [built-in options][builtin_opts]. To get the current list execute `meson configure` in the build directory. [builtin_opts]: https://mesonbuild.com/Builtin-options.html ### Visual Studio #### Startup project The `backend_startup_project` option can be set to define the default project that will be executed with the "Start debugging F5" action in visual studio. It should be the same name as an executable target name. ```meson project('my_project', 'c', default_options: ['backend_startup_project=my_exe']) executable('my_exe', ...) ``` ### Ninja #### Max links The `backend_max_links` can be set to limit the number of processes that ninja will use to link.