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---
short-description: Overview of the Meson build system
...
# Overview
Meson is a build system that is designed to be as user-friendly as
possible without sacrificing performance. The main tool for this is a
custom language that the user uses to describe the structure of his
build. The main design goals of this language has been simplicity,
clarity and conciseness. Much inspiration was drawn from the Python
programming language, which is considered very readable, even to
people who have not programmed in Python before.
Another main idea has been to provide first class support for modern
programming tools and best practices. These include features as varied
as unit testing, code coverage reporting, precompiled headers and the
like. All of these features should be immediately available to any
project using Meson. The user should not need to hunt for third party
macros or write shell scripts to get these features. They should just
work out of the box.
This power should not come at the expense of limited usability. Many
software builds require unorthodox steps. A common example is that you
first need to build a custom tool and then use that tool to generate
more source code to build. This functionality needs to be supported
and be as easy to use as other parts of the system.
Terminology
--
Meson follows the overall structure of other popular build systems,
such as CMake and GNU Autotools. This means that the build is divided
into two discrete steps: *configure step* and *build step*. The first
step inspects the system, checks for dependencies and does all other
steps necessary to configure the build. It then generates the actual
build system. The second step is simply executing this generated build
system. The end result is a bunch of *build targets*, which are
usually executables and shared and static libraries.
The directory that contains the source code is called the *source
directory*. Correspondingly the directory where the output is written
is called the *build directory*. In other build systems it is common
to have these two be the same directory. This is called an *in-source
build*. The case where the build directory is separate is called an
*out-of-source build*.
What sets Meson apart from most build systems is that it enforces a
separate build directory. All files created by the build system are
put in the build directory. It is actually impossible to do an
in-source build. For people used to building inside their source tree,
this may seem like a needless complication. However there are several
benefits to doing only out-of-source builds. These will be explained
in the next chapter.
When the source code is built, a set of *unit tests* is usually
run. They ensure that the program is working as it should. If it does,
the build result can be *installed* after which it is ready for use.
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