%scons; %builders-mod; %functions-mod; %tools-mod; %variables-mod; ]> A dictionary mapping the names of the builders available through this environment to underlying Builder objects. Builders named Alias, CFile, CXXFile, DVI, Library, Object, PDF, PostScript, and Program are available by default. If you initialize this variable when an Environment is created: env = Environment(BUILDERS = {'NewBuilder' : foo}) the default Builders will no longer be available. To use a new Builder object in addition to the default Builders, add your new Builder object like this: env = Environment() env.Append(BUILDERS = {'NewBuilder' : foo}) or this: env = Environment() env['BUILDERS]['NewBuilder'] = foo A function that converts a string into a Dir instance relative to the target being built. A dictionary of environment variables to use when invoking commands. When &cv-ENV; is used in a command all list values will be joined using the path separator and any other non-string values will simply be coerced to a string. Note that, by default, &scons; does not propagate the environment in force when you execute &scons; to the commands used to build target files. This is so that builds will be guaranteed repeatable regardless of the environment variables set at the time &scons; is invoked. If you want to propagate your environment variables to the commands executed to build target files, you must do so explicitly: import os env = Environment(ENV = os.environ) Note that you can choose only to propagate certain environment variables. A common example is the system PATH environment variable, so that &scons; uses the same utilities as the invoking shell (or other process): import os env = Environment(ENV = {'PATH' : os.environ['PATH']}) A function that converts a string into a File instance relative to the target being built. A list of the available implicit dependency scanners. New file scanners may be added by appending to this list, although the more flexible approach is to associate scanners with a specific Builder. See the sections "Builder Objects" and "Scanner Objects," below, for more information. A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.) A list of the names of the Tool specifications that are part of this construction environment. (action, [cmd/str/fun, [var, ...]] [option=value, ...]) Creates an Action object for the specified action. See the section "Action Objects," below, for a complete explanation of the arguments and behavior. Note that the env.Action() form of the invocation will expand construction variables in any argument strings, including the action argument, at the time it is called using the construction variables in the env construction environment through which env.Action() was called. The Action() form delays all variable expansion until the Action object is actually used. (object, function, [name]) (function, [name]) When called with the AddMethod() form, adds the specified function to the specified object as the specified method name. When called with the env.AddMethod() form, adds the specified function to the construction environment env as the specified method name. In both cases, if name is omitted or None, the name of the specified function itself is used for the method name. Examples: # Note that the first argument to the function to # be attached as a method must be the object through # which the method will be called; the Python # convention is to call it 'self'. def my_method(self, arg): print("my_method() got", arg) # Use the global AddMethod() function to add a method # to the Environment class. This AddMethod(Environment, my_method) env = Environment() env.my_method('arg') # Add the function as a method, using the function # name for the method call. env = Environment() env.AddMethod(my_method, 'other_method_name') env.other_method_name('another arg') (target, action) Arranges for the specified action to be performed after the specified target has been built. The specified action(s) may be an Action object, or anything that can be converted into an Action object (see below). When multiple targets are supplied, the action may be called multiple times, once after each action that generates one or more targets in the list. (target, action) Arranges for the specified action to be performed before the specified target is built. The specified action(s) may be an Action object, or anything that can be converted into an Action object (see below). When multiple targets are specified, the action(s) may be called multiple times, once before each action that generates one or more targets in the list. Note that if any of the targets are built in multiple steps, the action will be invoked just before the "final" action that specifically generates the specified target(s). For example, when building an executable program from a specified source .c file via an intermediate object file: foo = Program('foo.c') AddPreAction(foo, 'pre_action') The specified pre_action would be executed before &scons; calls the link command that actually generates the executable program binary foo, not before compiling the foo.c file into an object file. (alias, [targets, [action]]) Creates one or more phony targets that expand to one or more other targets. An optional action (command) or list of actions can be specified that will be executed whenever the any of the alias targets are out-of-date. Returns the Node object representing the alias, which exists outside of any file system. This Node object, or the alias name, may be used as a dependency of any other target, including another alias. &f-Alias; can be called multiple times for the same alias to add additional targets to the alias, or additional actions to the list for this alias. Examples: Alias('install') Alias('install', '/usr/bin') Alias(['install', 'install-lib'], '/usr/local/lib') env.Alias('install', ['/usr/local/bin', '/usr/local/lib']) env.Alias('install', ['/usr/local/man']) env.Alias('update', ['file1', 'file2'], "update_database $SOURCES") (target, ...) Marks each given target so that it is always assumed to be out of date, and will always be rebuilt if needed. Note, however, that &f-AlwaysBuild; does not add its target(s) to the default target list, so the targets will only be built if they are specified on the command line, or are a dependent of a target specified on the command line--but they will always be built if so specified. Multiple targets can be passed in to a single call to &f-AlwaysBuild;. (key=val, [...]) Appends the specified keyword arguments to the end of construction variables in the environment. If the Environment does not have the specified construction variable, it is simply added to the environment. If the values of the construction variable and the keyword argument are the same type, then the two values will be simply added together. Otherwise, the construction variable and the value of the keyword argument are both coerced to lists, and the lists are added together. (See also the Prepend method, below.) Example: env.Append(CCFLAGS = ' -g', FOO = ['foo.yyy']) (name, newpath, [envname, sep, delete_existing]) This appends new path elements to the given path in the specified external environment (ENV by default). This will only add any particular path once (leaving the last one it encounters and ignoring the rest, to preserve path order), and to help assure this, will normalize all paths (using os.path.normpath and os.path.normcase). This can also handle the case where the given old path variable is a list instead of a string, in which case a list will be returned instead of a string. If delete_existing is 0, then adding a path that already exists will not move it to the end; it will stay where it is in the list. Example: print 'before:',env['ENV']['INCLUDE'] include_path = '/foo/bar:/foo' env.AppendENVPath('INCLUDE', include_path) print 'after:',env['ENV']['INCLUDE'] yields: before: /foo:/biz after: /biz:/foo/bar:/foo (key=val, [...], delete_existing=0) Appends the specified keyword arguments to the end of construction variables in the environment. If the Environment does not have the specified construction variable, it is simply added to the environment. If the construction variable being appended to is a list, then any value(s) that already exist in the construction variable will not be added again to the list. However, if delete_existing is 1, existing matching values are removed first, so existing values in the arg list move to the end of the list. Example: env.AppendUnique(CCFLAGS = '-g', FOO = ['foo.yyy']) (build_dir, src_dir, [duplicate]) Deprecated synonyms for &f-VariantDir; and env.VariantDir(). The build_dir argument becomes the variant_dir argument of &f-VariantDir; or env.VariantDir(). (action, [arguments]) Creates a Builder object for the specified action. See the section "Builder Objects," below, for a complete explanation of the arguments and behavior. Note that the env.Builder() form of the invocation will expand construction variables in any arguments strings, including the action argument, at the time it is called using the construction variables in the env construction environment through which env.Builder() was called. The &f-Builder; form delays all variable expansion until after the Builder object is actually called. (cache_dir) Specifies that &scons; will maintain a cache of derived files in cache_dir. The derived files in the cache will be shared among all the builds using the same &f-CacheDir; call. Specifying a cache_dir of None disables derived file caching. Calling env.CacheDir() will only affect targets built through the specified construction environment. Calling &f-CacheDir; sets a global default that will be used by all targets built through construction environments that do not have an env.CacheDir() specified. When a CacheDir() is being used and &scons; finds a derived file that needs to be rebuilt, it will first look in the cache to see if a derived file has already been built from identical input files and an identical build action (as incorporated into the MD5 build signature). If so, &scons; will retrieve the file from the cache. If the derived file is not present in the cache, &scons; will rebuild it and then place a copy of the built file in the cache (identified by its MD5 build signature), so that it may be retrieved by other builds that need to build the same derived file from identical inputs. Use of a specified &f-CacheDir; may be disabled for any invocation by using the option. If the option is used, &scons; will place a copy of all derived files in the cache, even if they already existed and were not built by this invocation. This is useful to populate a cache the first time &f-CacheDir; is added to a build, or after using the option. When using &f-CacheDir;, &scons; will report, "Retrieved `file' from cache," unless the option is being used. When the option is used, &scons; will print the action that would have been used to build the file, without any indication that the file was actually retrieved from the cache. This is useful to generate build logs that are equivalent regardless of whether a given derived file has been built in-place or retrieved from the cache. The &f-link-NoCache; method can be used to disable caching of specific files. This can be useful if inputs and/or outputs of some tool are impossible to predict or prohibitively large. (targets, files_or_dirs) This specifies a list of files or directories which should be removed whenever the targets are specified with the command line option. The specified targets may be a list or an individual target. Multiple calls to &f-Clean; are legal, and create new targets or add files and directories to the clean list for the specified targets. Multiple files or directories should be specified either as separate arguments to the &f-Clean; method, or as a list. &f-Clean; will also accept the return value of any of the construction environment Builder methods. Examples: The related &f-link-NoClean; function overrides calling &f-Clean; for the same target, and any targets passed to both functions will not be removed by the option. Examples: Clean('foo', ['bar', 'baz']) Clean('dist', env.Program('hello', 'hello.c')) Clean(['foo', 'bar'], 'something_else_to_clean') In this example, installing the project creates a subdirectory for the documentation. This statement causes the subdirectory to be removed if the project is deinstalled. Clean(docdir, os.path.join(docdir, projectname)) ([key=val, ...]) Returns a separate copy of a construction environment. If there are any keyword arguments specified, they are added to the returned copy, overwriting any existing values for the keywords. Example: env2 = env.Clone() env3 = env.Clone(CCFLAGS = '-g') Additionally, a list of tools and a toolpath may be specified, as in the Environment constructor: def MyTool(env): env['FOO'] = 'bar' env4 = env.Clone(tools = ['msvc', MyTool]) The parse_flags keyword argument is also recognized: # create an environment for compiling programs that use wxWidgets wx_env = env.Clone(parse_flags = '!wx-config --cflags --cxxflags') The &b-Command; "Builder" is actually implemented as a function that looks like a Builder, but actually takes an additional argument of the action from which the Builder should be made. See the &f-link-Command; function description for the calling syntax and details. (target, source, action, [key=val, ...]) Executes a specific action (or list of actions) to build a target file or files. This is more convenient than defining a separate Builder object for a single special-case build. As a special case, the source_scanner keyword argument can be used to specify a Scanner object that will be used to scan the sources. (The global DirScanner object can be used if any of the sources will be directories that must be scanned on-disk for changes to files that aren't already specified in other Builder of function calls.) Any other keyword arguments specified override any same-named existing construction variables. An action can be an external command, specified as a string, or a callable Python object; see "Action Objects," below, for more complete information. Also note that a string specifying an external command may be preceded by an @ (at-sign) to suppress printing the command in question, or by a - (hyphen) to ignore the exit status of the external command. Examples: env.Command('foo.out', 'foo.in', "$FOO_BUILD < $SOURCES > $TARGET") env.Command('bar.out', 'bar.in', ["rm -f $TARGET", "$BAR_BUILD < $SOURCES > $TARGET"], ENV = {'PATH' : '/usr/local/bin/'}) def rename(env, target, source): import os os.rename('.tmp', str(target[0])) env.Command('baz.out', 'baz.in', ["$BAZ_BUILD < $SOURCES > .tmp", rename ]) Note that the &f-Command; function will usually assume, by default, that the specified targets and/or sources are Files, if no other part of the configuration identifies what type of entry it is. If necessary, you can explicitly specify that targets or source nodes should be treated as directoriese by using the &f-link-Dir; or env.Dir() functions. Examples: env.Command('ddd.list', Dir('ddd'), 'ls -l $SOURCE > $TARGET') env['DISTDIR'] = 'destination/directory' env.Command(env.Dir('$DISTDIR')), None, make_distdir) (Also note that SCons will usually automatically create any directory necessary to hold a target file, so you normally don't need to create directories by hand.) (env, [custom_tests, conf_dir, log_file, config_h]) ([custom_tests, conf_dir, log_file, config_h]) Creates a Configure object for integrated functionality similar to GNU autoconf. See the section "Configure Contexts," below, for a complete explanation of the arguments and behavior. ([key=val, ...]) A now-deprecated synonym for env.Clone(). (function) Specifies that all up-to-date decisions for targets built through this construction environment will be handled by the specified function. The function can be one of the following strings that specify the type of decision function to be performed: timestamp-newer Specifies that a target shall be considered out of date and rebuilt if the dependency's timestamp is newer than the target file's timestamp. This is the behavior of the classic Make utility, and make can be used a synonym for timestamp-newer. timestamp-match Specifies that a target shall be considered out of date and rebuilt if the dependency's timestamp is different than the timestamp recorded the last time the target was built. This provides behavior very similar to the classic Make utility (in particular, files are not opened up so that their contents can be checksummed) except that the target will also be rebuilt if a dependency file has been restored to a version with an earlier timestamp, such as can happen when restoring files from backup archives. MD5 Specifies that a target shall be considered out of date and rebuilt if the dependency's content has changed since the last time the target was built, as determined be performing an MD5 checksum on the dependency's contents and comparing it to the checksum recorded the last time the target was built. content can be used as a synonym for MD5. MD5-timestamp Specifies that a target shall be considered out of date and rebuilt if the dependency's content has changed since the last time the target was built, except that dependencies with a timestamp that matches the last time the target was rebuilt will be assumed to be up-to-date and not rebuilt. This provides behavior very similar to the MD5 behavior of always checksumming file contents, with an optimization of not checking the contents of files whose timestamps haven't changed. The drawback is that SCons will not detect if a file's content has changed but its timestamp is the same, as might happen in an automated script that runs a build, updates a file, and runs the build again, all within a single second. Examples: # Use exact timestamp matches by default. Decider('timestamp-match') # Use MD5 content signatures for any targets built # with the attached construction environment. env.Decider('content') In addition to the above already-available functions, the function argument may be an actual Python function that takes the following three arguments: dependency The Node (file) which should cause the target to be rebuilt if it has "changed" since the last tme target was built. target The Node (file) being built. In the normal case, this is what should get rebuilt if the dependency has "changed." prev_ni Stored information about the state of the dependency the last time the target was built. This can be consulted to match various file characteristics such as the timestamp, size, or content signature. The function should return a True (non-zero) value if the dependency has "changed" since the last time the target was built (indicating that the target should be rebuilt), and False (zero) otherwise (indicating that the target should not be rebuilt). Note that the decision can be made using whatever criteria are appopriate. Ignoring some or all of the function arguments is perfectly normal. Example: def my_decider(dependency, target, prev_ni): return not os.path.exists(str(target)) env.Decider(my_decider) (target, dependency) Specifies an explicit dependency; the target will be rebuilt whenever the dependency has changed. Both the specified target and dependency can be a string (usually the path name of a file or directory) or Node objects, or a list of strings or Node objects (such as returned by a Builder call). This should only be necessary for cases where the dependency is not caught by a Scanner for the file. Example: env.Depends('foo', 'other-input-file-for-foo') mylib = env.Library('mylib.c') installed_lib = env.Install('lib', mylib) bar = env.Program('bar.c') # Arrange for the library to be copied into the installation # directory before trying to build the "bar" program. # (Note that this is for example only. A "real" library # dependency would normally be configured through the $LIBS # and $LIBPATH variables, not using an env.Depends() call.) env.Depends(bar, installed_lib) ([vars]) Returns a dictionary object containing copies of all of the construction variables in the environment. If there are any variable names specified, only the specified construction variables are returned in the dictionary. Example: dict = env.Dictionary() cc_dict = env.Dictionary('CC', 'CCFLAGS', 'CCCOM') (name, [directory]) This returns a Directory Node, an object that represents the specified directory name. name can be a relative or absolute path. directory is an optional directory that will be used as the parent directory. If no directory is specified, the current script's directory is used as the parent. If name is a list, SCons returns a list of Dir nodes. Construction variables are expanded in name. Directory Nodes can be used anywhere you would supply a string as a directory name to a Builder method or function. Directory Nodes have attributes and methods that are useful in many situations; see "File and Directory Nodes," below. ([key]) Returns a pretty printable representation of the environment. key, if not None, should be a string containing the name of the variable of interest. This SConstruct: env=Environment() print env.Dump('CCCOM') will print: '$CC -c -o $TARGET $CCFLAGS $CPPFLAGS $_CPPDEFFLAGS $_CPPINCFLAGS $SOURCES' While this SConstruct: env=Environment() print env.Dump() will print: { 'AR': 'ar', 'ARCOM': '$AR $ARFLAGS $TARGET $SOURCES\n$RANLIB $RANLIBFLAGS $TARGET', 'ARFLAGS': ['r'], 'AS': 'as', 'ASCOM': '$AS $ASFLAGS -o $TARGET $SOURCES', 'ASFLAGS': [], ... ([key=value, ...]) Return a new construction environment initialized with the specified key=value pairs. (action, [strfunction, varlist]) Executes an Action object. The specified action may be an Action object (see the section "Action Objects," below, for a complete explanation of the arguments and behavior), or it may be a command-line string, list of commands, or executable Python function, each of which will be converted into an Action object and then executed. The exit value of the command or return value of the Python function will be returned. Note that &scons; will print an error message if the executed action fails--that is, exits with or returns a non-zero value. &scons; will not, however, automatically terminate the build if the specified action fails. If you want the build to stop in response to a failed &f-Execute; call, you must explicitly check for a non-zero return value: Execute(Copy('file.out', 'file.in')) if Execute("mkdir sub/dir/ectory"): # The mkdir failed, don't try to build. Exit(1) (name, [directory]) This returns a File Node, an object that represents the specified file name. name can be a relative or absolute path. directory is an optional directory that will be used as the parent directory. If name is a list, SCons returns a list of File nodes. Construction variables are expanded in name. File Nodes can be used anywhere you would supply a string as a file name to a Builder method or function. File Nodes have attributes and methods that are useful in many situations; see "File and Directory Nodes," below. (file, dirs) Search for file in the path specified by dirs. dirs may be a list of directory names or a single directory name. In addition to searching for files that exist in the filesystem, this function also searches for derived files that have not yet been built. Example: foo = env.FindFile('foo', ['dir1', 'dir2']) () Returns the list of targets set up by the &b-link-Install; or &b-link-InstallAs; builders. This function serves as a convenient method to select the contents of a binary package. Example: Install( '/bin', [ 'executable_a', 'executable_b' ] ) # will return the file node list # [ '/bin/executable_a', '/bin/executable_b' ] FindInstalledFiles() Install( '/lib', [ 'some_library' ] ) # will return the file node list # [ '/bin/executable_a', '/bin/executable_b', '/lib/some_library' ] FindInstalledFiles() (node='"."') Returns the list of nodes which serve as the source of the built files. It does so by inspecting the dependency tree starting at the optional argument node which defaults to the '"."'-node. It will then return all leaves of node. These are all children which have no further children. This function is a convenient method to select the contents of a Source Package. Example: Program( 'src/main_a.c' ) Program( 'src/main_b.c' ) Program( 'main_c.c' ) # returns ['main_c.c', 'src/main_a.c', 'SConstruct', 'src/main_b.c'] FindSourceFiles() # returns ['src/main_b.c', 'src/main_a.c' ] FindSourceFiles( 'src' ) As you can see build support files (SConstruct in the above example) will also be returned by this function. (sequence) Takes a sequence (that is, a Python list or tuple) that may contain nested sequences and returns a flattened list containing all of the individual elements in any sequence. This can be helpful for collecting the lists returned by calls to Builders; other Builders will automatically flatten lists specified as input, but direct Python manipulation of these lists does not. Examples: foo = Object('foo.c') bar = Object('bar.c') # Because `foo' and `bar' are lists returned by the Object() Builder, # `objects' will be a list containing nested lists: objects = ['f1.o', foo, 'f2.o', bar, 'f3.o'] # Passing such a list to another Builder is all right because # the Builder will flatten the list automatically: Program(source = objects) # If you need to manipulate the list directly using Python, you need to # call Flatten() yourself, or otherwise handle nested lists: for object in Flatten(objects): print str(object) (file, [...]) Returns the &scons; path name (or names) for the specified file (or files). The specified file or files may be &scons; Nodes or strings representing path names. (pattern, [ondisk, source, strings, exclude]) Returns Nodes (or strings) that match the specified pattern, relative to the directory of the current &SConscript; file. The env.Glob() form performs string substition on pattern and returns whatever matches the resulting expanded pattern. The specified pattern uses Unix shell style metacharacters for matching: * matches everything ? matches any single character [seq] matches any character in seq [!seq] matches any char not in seq If the first character of a filename is a dot, it must be matched explicitly. Character matches do not span directory separators. The &f-Glob; knows about repositories (see the &f-link-Repository; function) and source directories (see the &f-link-VariantDir; function) and returns a Node (or string, if so configured) in the local (SConscript) directory if matching Node is found anywhere in a corresponding repository or source directory. The ondisk argument may be set to False (or any other non-true value) to disable the search for matches on disk, thereby only returning matches among already-configured File or Dir Nodes. The default behavior is to return corresponding Nodes for any on-disk matches found. The source argument may be set to True (or any equivalent value) to specify that, when the local directory is a &f-VariantDir;, the returned Nodes should be from the corresponding source directory, not the local directory. The strings argument may be set to True (or any equivalent value) to have the &f-Glob; function return strings, not Nodes, that represent the matched files or directories. The returned strings will be relative to the local (SConscript) directory. (Note that This may make it easier to perform arbitrary manipulation of file names, but if the returned strings are passed to a different &SConscript; file, any Node translation will be relative to the other &SConscript; directory, not the original &SConscript; directory.) The exclude argument may be set to a pattern or a list of patterns (following the same Unix shell semantics) which must be filtered out of returned elements. Elements matching a least one pattern of this list will be excluded. Examples: Program('foo', Glob('*.c')) Zip('/tmp/everything', Glob('.??*') + Glob('*')) sources = Glob('*.cpp', exclude=['os_*_specific_*.cpp']) + Glob('os_%s_specific_*.cpp'%currentOS) (target, dependency) The specified dependency file(s) will be ignored when deciding if the target file(s) need to be rebuilt. You can also use &f-Ignore; to remove a target from the default build. In order to do this you must specify the directory the target will be built in as the target, and the file you want to skip building as the dependency. Note that this will only remove the dependencies listed from the files built by default. It will still be built if that dependency is needed by another object being built. See the third and forth examples below. Examples: env.Ignore('foo', 'foo.c') env.Ignore('bar', ['bar1.h', 'bar2.h']) env.Ignore('.','foobar.obj') env.Ignore('bar','bar/foobar.obj') (string) The specified string will be preserved as-is and not have construction variables expanded. (targets) The specified targets will have copies made in the local tree, even if an already up-to-date copy exists in a repository. Returns a list of the target Node or Nodes. (arg, [unique]) Merges the specified arg values to the construction environment's construction variables. If the arg argument is not a dictionary, it is converted to one by calling &f-link-env-ParseFlags; on the argument before the values are merged. Note that arg must be a single value, so multiple strings must be passed in as a list, not as separate arguments to &f-env-MergeFlags;. By default, duplicate values are eliminated; you can, however, specify unique=0 to allow duplicate values to be added. When eliminating duplicate values, any construction variables that end with the string PATH keep the left-most unique value. All other construction variables keep the right-most unique value. Examples: # Add an optimization flag to $CCFLAGS. env.MergeFlags('-O3') # Combine the flags returned from running pkg-config with an optimization # flag and merge the result into the construction variables. env.MergeFlags(['!pkg-config gtk+-2.0 --cflags', '-O3']) # Combine an optimization flag with the flags returned from running pkg-config # twice and merge the result into the construction variables. env.MergeFlags(['-O3', '!pkg-config gtk+-2.0 --cflags --libs', '!pkg-config libpng12 --cflags --libs']) (target, ...) Specifies a list of files which should not be cached whenever the &f-link-CacheDir; method has been activated. The specified targets may be a list or an individual target. Multiple files should be specified either as separate arguments to the &f-NoCache; method, or as a list. &f-NoCache; will also accept the return value of any of the construction environment Builder methods. Calling &f-NoCache; on directories and other non-File Node types has no effect because only File Nodes are cached. Examples: NoCache('foo.elf') NoCache(env.Program('hello', 'hello.c')) (target, ...) Specifies a list of files or directories which should not be removed whenever the targets (or their dependencies) are specified with the command line option. The specified targets may be a list or an individual target. Multiple calls to &f-NoClean; are legal, and prevent each specified target from being removed by calls to the option. Multiple files or directories should be specified either as separate arguments to the &f-NoClean; method, or as a list. &f-NoClean; will also accept the return value of any of the construction environment Builder methods. Calling &f-NoClean; for a target overrides calling &f-link-Clean; for the same target, and any targets passed to both functions will not be removed by the option. Examples: NoClean('foo.elf') NoClean(env.Program('hello', 'hello.c')) (command, [function, unique]) Calls the specified function to modify the environment as specified by the output of command. The default function is &f-link-env-MergeFlags;, which expects the output of a typical *-config command (for example, gtk-config) and adds the options to the appropriate construction variables. By default, duplicate values are not added to any construction variables; you can specify unique=0 to allow duplicate values to be added. Interpreted options and the construction variables they affect are as specified for the &f-link-env-ParseFlags; method (which this method calls). See that method's description, below, for a table of options and construction variables. (filename, [must_exist, only_one]) Parses the contents of the specified filename as a list of dependencies in the style of &Make; or mkdep, and explicitly establishes all of the listed dependencies. By default, it is not an error if the specified filename does not exist. The optional must_exist argument may be set to a non-zero value to have scons throw an exception and generate an error if the file does not exist, or is otherwise inaccessible. The optional only_one argument may be set to a non-zero value to have scons thrown an exception and generate an error if the file contains dependency information for more than one target. This can provide a small sanity check for files intended to be generated by, for example, the gcc -M flag, which should typically only write dependency information for one output file into a corresponding .d file. The filename and all of the files listed therein will be interpreted relative to the directory of the &SConscript; file which calls the &f-ParseDepends; function. (flags, ...) Parses one or more strings containing typical command-line flags for GCC tool chains and returns a dictionary with the flag values separated into the appropriate SCons construction variables. This is intended as a companion to the &f-link-env-MergeFlags; method, but allows for the values in the returned dictionary to be modified, if necessary, before merging them into the construction environment. (Note that &f-env-MergeFlags; will call this method if its argument is not a dictionary, so it is usually not necessary to call &f-link-env-ParseFlags; directly unless you want to manipulate the values.) If the first character in any string is an exclamation mark (!), the rest of the string is executed as a command, and the output from the command is parsed as GCC tool chain command-line flags and added to the resulting dictionary. Flag values are translated accordig to the prefix found, and added to the following construction variables: -arch CCFLAGS, LINKFLAGS -D CPPDEFINES -framework FRAMEWORKS -frameworkdir= FRAMEWORKPATH -include CCFLAGS -isysroot CCFLAGS, LINKFLAGS -I CPPPATH -l LIBS -L LIBPATH -mno-cygwin CCFLAGS, LINKFLAGS -mwindows LINKFLAGS -pthread CCFLAGS, LINKFLAGS -std= CFLAGS -Wa, ASFLAGS, CCFLAGS -Wl,-rpath= RPATH -Wl,-R, RPATH -Wl,-R RPATH -Wl, LINKFLAGS -Wp, CPPFLAGS - CCFLAGS + CCFLAGS, LINKFLAGS Any other strings not associated with options are assumed to be the names of libraries and added to the &cv-LIBS; construction variable. Examples (all of which produce the same result): dict = env.ParseFlags('-O2 -Dfoo -Dbar=1') dict = env.ParseFlags('-O2', '-Dfoo', '-Dbar=1') dict = env.ParseFlags(['-O2', '-Dfoo -Dbar=1']) dict = env.ParseFlags('-O2', '!echo -Dfoo -Dbar=1') (string) The &f-Platform; form returns a callable object that can be used to initialize a construction environment using the platform keyword of the &f-Environment; function. Example: env = Environment(platform = Platform('win32')) The &f-env-Platform; form applies the callable object for the specified platform string to the environment through which the method was called. env.Platform('posix') Note that the win32 platform adds the SystemDrive and SystemRoot variables from the user's external environment to the construction environment's &cv-link-ENV; dictionary. This is so that any executed commands that use sockets to connect with other systems (such as fetching source files from external CVS repository specifications like :pserver:anonymous@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/scons) will work on Windows systems. (key=val, [...]) Appends the specified keyword arguments to the beginning of construction variables in the environment. If the Environment does not have the specified construction variable, it is simply added to the environment. If the values of the construction variable and the keyword argument are the same type, then the two values will be simply added together. Otherwise, the construction variable and the value of the keyword argument are both coerced to lists, and the lists are added together. (See also the Append method, above.) Example: env.Prepend(CCFLAGS = '-g ', FOO = ['foo.yyy']) (name, newpath, [envname, sep, delete_existing]) This appends new path elements to the given path in the specified external environment (&cv-ENV; by default). This will only add any particular path once (leaving the first one it encounters and ignoring the rest, to preserve path order), and to help assure this, will normalize all paths (using os.path.normpath and os.path.normcase). This can also handle the case where the given old path variable is a list instead of a string, in which case a list will be returned instead of a string. If delete_existing is 0, then adding a path that already exists will not move it to the beginning; it will stay where it is in the list. Example: print 'before:',env['ENV']['INCLUDE'] include_path = '/foo/bar:/foo' env.PrependENVPath('INCLUDE', include_path) print 'after:',env['ENV']['INCLUDE'] The above example will print: before: /biz:/foo after: /foo/bar:/foo:/biz (key=val, delete_existing=0, [...]) Appends the specified keyword arguments to the beginning of construction variables in the environment. If the Environment does not have the specified construction variable, it is simply added to the environment. If the construction variable being appended to is a list, then any value(s) that already exist in the construction variable will not be added again to the list. However, if delete_existing is 1, existing matching values are removed first, so existing values in the arg list move to the front of the list. Example: env.PrependUnique(CCFLAGS = '-g', FOO = ['foo.yyy']) (modulename) This returns a Directory Node similar to Dir. The python module / package is looked up and if located the directory is returned for the location. modulename Is a named python package / module to lookup the directory for it's location. If modulename is a list, SCons returns a list of Dir nodes. Construction variables are expanded in modulename. (key=val, [...]) Replaces construction variables in the Environment with the specified keyword arguments. Example: env.Replace(CCFLAGS = '-g', FOO = 'foo.xxx') (directory) Specifies that directory is a repository to be searched for files. Multiple calls to &f-Repository; are legal, and each one adds to the list of repositories that will be searched. To &scons;, a repository is a copy of the source tree, from the top-level directory on down, which may contain both source files and derived files that can be used to build targets in the local source tree. The canonical example would be an official source tree maintained by an integrator. If the repository contains derived files, then the derived files should have been built using &scons;, so that the repository contains the necessary signature information to allow &scons; to figure out when it is appropriate to use the repository copy of a derived file, instead of building one locally. Note that if an up-to-date derived file already exists in a repository, &scons; will not make a copy in the local directory tree. In order to guarantee that a local copy will be made, use the &f-link-Local; method. (target, prerequisite) Specifies an order-only relationship between the specified target file(s) and the specified prerequisite file(s). The prerequisite file(s) will be (re)built, if necessary, before the target file(s), but the target file(s) do not actually depend on the prerequisites and will not be rebuilt simply because the prerequisite file(s) change. Example: env.Requires('foo', 'file-that-must-be-built-before-foo') (function, [argument, keys, path_function, node_class, node_factory, scan_check, recursive]) Creates a Scanner object for the specified function. See the section "Scanner Objects," below, for a complete explanation of the arguments and behavior. (value) By default, &scons; changes its working directory to the directory in which each subsidiary SConscript file lives. This behavior may be disabled by specifying either: SConscriptChdir(0) env.SConscriptChdir(0) in which case &scons; will stay in the top-level directory while reading all SConscript files. (This may be necessary when building from repositories, when all the directories in which SConscript files may be found don't necessarily exist locally.) You may enable and disable this ability by calling SConscriptChdir() multiple times. Example: env = Environment() SConscriptChdir(0) SConscript('foo/SConscript') # will not chdir to foo env.SConscriptChdir(1) SConscript('bar/SConscript') # will chdir to bar ([file, dbm_module]) This tells &scons; to store all file signatures in the specified database file. If the file name is omitted, .sconsign is used by default. (The actual file name(s) stored on disk may have an appropriated suffix appended by the dbm_module.) If file is not an absolute path name, the file is placed in the same directory as the top-level &SConstruct; file. If file is None, then &scons; will store file signatures in a separate .sconsign file in each directory, not in one global database file. (This was the default behavior prior to SCons 0.96.91 and 0.97.) The optional dbm_module argument can be used to specify which Python database module The default is to use a custom SCons.dblite module that uses pickled Python data structures, and which works on all Python versions. Examples: # Explicitly stores signatures in ".sconsign.dblite" # in the top-level SConstruct directory (the # default behavior). SConsignFile() # Stores signatures in the file "etc/scons-signatures" # relative to the top-level SConstruct directory. SConsignFile("etc/scons-signatures") # Stores signatures in the specified absolute file name. SConsignFile("/home/me/SCons/signatures") # Stores signatures in a separate .sconsign file # in each directory. SConsignFile(None) (key=val, [...]) Sets construction variables to default values specified with the keyword arguments if (and only if) the variables are not already set. The following statements are equivalent: env.SetDefault(FOO = 'foo') if 'FOO' not in env: env['FOO'] = 'foo' (side_effect, target) Declares side_effect as a side effect of building target. Both side_effect and target can be a list, a file name, or a node. A side effect is a target file that is created or updated as a side effect of building other targets. For example, a Windows PDB file is created as a side effect of building the .obj files for a static library, and various log files are created updated as side effects of various TeX commands. If a target is a side effect of multiple build commands, &scons; will ensure that only one set of commands is executed at a time. Consequently, you only need to use this method for side-effect targets that are built as a result of multiple build commands. Because multiple build commands may update the same side effect file, by default the side_effect target is not automatically removed when the target is removed by the option. (Note, however, that the side_effect might be removed as part of cleaning the directory in which it lives.) If you want to make sure the side_effect is cleaned whenever a specific target is cleaned, you must specify this explicitly with the &f-link-Clean; or &f-env-Clean; function. (entries, builder) This function and its associate factory functions are deprecated. There is no replacement. The intended use was to keep a local tree in sync with an archive, but in actuality the function only causes the archive to be fetched on the first run. Synchronizing with the archive is best done external to &SCons;. Arrange for non-existent source files to be fetched from a source code management system using the specified builder. The specified entries may be a Node, string or list of both, and may represent either individual source files or directories in which source files can be found. For any non-existent source files, &scons; will search up the directory tree and use the first &f-SourceCode; builder it finds. The specified builder may be None, in which case &scons; will not use a builder to fetch source files for the specified entries, even if a &f-SourceCode; builder has been specified for a directory higher up the tree. &scons; will, by default, fetch files from SCCS or RCS subdirectories without explicit configuration. This takes some extra processing time to search for the necessary source code management files on disk. You can avoid these extra searches and speed up your build a little by disabling these searches as follows: env.SourceCode('.', None) Note that if the specified builder is one you create by hand, it must have an associated construction environment to use when fetching a source file. &scons; provides a set of canned factory functions that return appropriate Builders for various popular source code management systems. Canonical examples of invocation include: env.SourceCode('.', env.BitKeeper('/usr/local/BKsources')) env.SourceCode('src', env.CVS('/usr/local/CVSROOT')) env.SourceCode('/', env.RCS()) env.SourceCode(['f1.c', 'f2.c'], env.SCCS()) env.SourceCode('no_source.c', None) (type) Note: Although it is not yet officially deprecated, use of this function is discouraged. See the &f-link-Decider; function for a more flexible and straightforward way to configure SCons' decision-making. The &f-SourceSignatures; function tells &scons; how to decide if a source file (a file that is not built from any other files) has changed since the last time it was used to build a particular target file. Legal values are MD5 or timestamp. If the environment method is used, the specified type of source signature is only used when deciding whether targets built with that environment are up-to-date or must be rebuilt. If the global function is used, the specified type of source signature becomes the default used for all decisions about whether targets are up-to-date. MD5 means &scons; decides that a source file has changed if the MD5 checksum of its contents has changed since the last time it was used to rebuild a particular target file. timestamp means &scons; decides that a source file has changed if its timestamp (modification time) has changed since the last time it was used to rebuild a particular target file. (Note that although this is similar to the behavior of Make, by default it will also rebuild if the dependency is older than the last time it was used to rebuild the target file.) There is no different between the two behaviors for Python &f-Value; node objects. MD5 signatures take longer to compute, but are more accurate than timestamp signatures. The default value is MD5. Note that the default &f-link-TargetSignatures; setting (see below) is to use this &f-SourceSignatures; setting for any target files that are used to build other target files. Consequently, changing the value of &f-SourceSignatures; will, by default, affect the up-to-date decision for all files in the build (or all files built with a specific construction environment when &f-env-SourceSignatures; is used). (arg) Returns a list of file names or other objects. If arg is a string, it will be split on strings of white-space characters within the string, making it easier to write long lists of file names. If arg is already a list, the list will be returned untouched. If arg is any other type of object, it will be returned as a list containing just the object. Example: files = Split("f1.c f2.c f3.c") files = env.Split("f4.c f5.c f6.c") files = Split(""" f7.c f8.c f9.c """) (input, [raw, target, source, conv]) Performs construction variable interpolation on the specified string or sequence argument input. By default, leading or trailing white space will be removed from the result. and all sequences of white space will be compressed to a single space character. Additionally, any $( and $) character sequences will be stripped from the returned string, The optional raw argument may be set to 1 if you want to preserve white space and $(-$) sequences. The raw argument may be set to 2 if you want to strip all characters between any $( and $) pairs (as is done for signature calculation). If the input is a sequence (list or tuple), the individual elements of the sequence will be expanded, and the results will be returned as a list. The optional target and source keyword arguments must be set to lists of target and source nodes, respectively, if you want the &cv-TARGET;, &cv-TARGETS;, &cv-SOURCE; and &cv-SOURCES; to be available for expansion. This is usually necessary if you are calling &f-env-subst; from within a Python function used as an SCons action. Returned string values or sequence elements are converted to their string representation by default. The optional conv argument may specify a conversion function that will be used in place of the default. For example, if you want Python objects (including SCons Nodes) to be returned as Python objects, you can use the Python λ idiom to pass in an unnamed function that simply returns its unconverted argument. Example: print env.subst("The C compiler is: $CC") def compile(target, source, env): sourceDir = env.subst("${SOURCE.srcdir}", target=target, source=source) source_nodes = env.subst('$EXPAND_TO_NODELIST', conv=lambda x: x) (type) Note: Although it is not yet officially deprecated, use of this function is discouraged. See the &f-link-Decider; function for a more flexible and straightforward way to configure SCons' decision-making. The &f-TargetSignatures; function tells &scons; how to decide if a target file (a file that is built from any other files) has changed since the last time it was used to build some other target file. Legal values are "build"; "content" (or its synonym "MD5"); "timestamp"; or "source". If the environment method is used, the specified type of target signature is only used for targets built with that environment. If the global function is used, the specified type of signature becomes the default used for all target files that don't have an explicit target signature type specified for their environments. "content" (or its synonym "MD5") means &scons; decides that a target file has changed if the MD5 checksum of its contents has changed since the last time it was used to rebuild some other target file. This means &scons; will open up MD5 sum the contents of target files after they're built, and may decide that it does not need to rebuild "downstream" target files if a file was rebuilt with exactly the same contents as the last time. "timestamp" means &scons; decides that a target file has changed if its timestamp (modification time) has changed since the last time it was used to rebuild some other target file. (Note that although this is similar to the behavior of Make, by default it will also rebuild if the dependency is older than the last time it was used to rebuild the target file.) "source" means &scons; decides that a target file has changed as specified by the corresponding &f-SourceSignatures; setting ("MD5" or "timestamp"). This means that &scons; will treat all input files to a target the same way, regardless of whether they are source files or have been built from other files. "build" means &scons; decides that a target file has changed if it has been rebuilt in this invocation or if its content or timestamp have changed as specified by the corresponding &f-SourceSignatures; setting. This "propagates" the status of a rebuilt file so that other "downstream" target files will always be rebuilt, even if the contents or the timestamp have not changed. "build" signatures are fastest because "content" (or "MD5") signatures take longer to compute, but are more accurate than "timestamp" signatures, and can prevent unnecessary "downstream" rebuilds when a target file is rebuilt to the exact same contents as the previous build. The "source" setting provides the most consistent behavior when other target files may be rebuilt from both source and target input files. The default value is "source". Because the default setting is "source", using &f-SourceSignatures; is generally preferable to &f-TargetSignatures;, so that the up-to-date decision will be consistent for all files (or all files built with a specific construction environment). Use of &f-TargetSignatures; provides specific control for how built target files affect their "downstream" dependencies. (string, [toolpath, **kw]) The &f-Tool; form of the function returns a callable object that can be used to initialize a construction environment using the tools keyword of the Environment() method. The object may be called with a construction environment as an argument, in which case the object will add the necessary variables to the construction environment and the name of the tool will be added to the &cv-link-TOOLS; construction variable. Additional keyword arguments are passed to the tool's generate() method. Examples: env = Environment(tools = [ Tool('msvc') ]) env = Environment() t = Tool('msvc') t(env) # adds 'msvc' to the TOOLS variable u = Tool('opengl', toolpath = ['tools']) u(env) # adds 'opengl' to the TOOLS variable The &f-env-Tool; form of the function applies the callable object for the specified tool string to the environment through which the method was called. Additional keyword arguments are passed to the tool's generate() method. env.Tool('gcc') env.Tool('opengl', toolpath = ['build/tools']) (value, [built_value]) Returns a Node object representing the specified Python value. Value Nodes can be used as dependencies of targets. If the result of calling str(value) changes between SCons runs, any targets depending on Value(value) will be rebuilt. (This is true even when using timestamps to decide if files are up-to-date.) When using timestamp source signatures, Value Nodes' timestamps are equal to the system time when the Node is created. The returned Value Node object has a write() method that can be used to "build" a Value Node by setting a new value. The optional built_value argument can be specified when the Value Node is created to indicate the Node should already be considered "built." There is a corresponding read() method that will return the built value of the Node. Examples: env = Environment() def create(target, source, env): # A function that will write a 'prefix=$SOURCE' # string into the file name specified as the # $TARGET. f = open(str(target[0]), 'wb') f.write('prefix=' + source[0].get_contents()) # Fetch the prefix= argument, if any, from the command # line, and use /usr/local as the default. prefix = ARGUMENTS.get('prefix', '/usr/local') # Attach a .Config() builder for the above function action # to the construction environment. env['BUILDERS']['Config'] = Builder(action = create) env.Config(target = 'package-config', source = Value(prefix)) def build_value(target, source, env): # A function that "builds" a Python Value by updating # the the Python value with the contents of the file # specified as the source of the Builder call ($SOURCE). target[0].write(source[0].get_contents()) output = env.Value('before') input = env.Value('after') # Attach a .UpdateValue() builder for the above function # action to the construction environment. env['BUILDERS']['UpdateValue'] = Builder(action = build_value) env.UpdateValue(target = Value(output), source = Value(input)) (variant_dir, src_dir, [duplicate]) Use the &f-VariantDir; function to create a copy of your sources in another location: if a name under variant_dir is not found but exists under src_dir, the file or directory is copied to variant_dir. Target files can be built in a different directory than the original sources by simply refering to the sources (and targets) within the variant tree. &f-VariantDir; can be called multiple times with the same src_dir to set up multiple builds with different options (variants). The src_dir location must be in or underneath the SConstruct file's directory, and variant_dir may not be underneath src_dir. The default behavior is for &scons; to physically duplicate the source files in the variant tree. Thus, a build performed in the variant tree is guaranteed to be identical to a build performed in the source tree even if intermediate source files are generated during the build, or preprocessors or other scanners search for included files relative to the source file, or individual compilers or other invoked tools are hard-coded to put derived files in the same directory as source files. If possible on the platform, the duplication is performed by linking rather than copying; see also the command-line option. Moreover, only the files needed for the build are duplicated; files and directories that are not used are not present in variant_dir. Duplicating the source tree may be disabled by setting the duplicate argument to 0 (zero). This will cause &scons; to invoke Builders using the path names of source files in src_dir and the path names of derived files within variant_dir. This is always more efficient than duplicate=1, and is usually safe for most builds (but see above for cases that may cause problems). Note that &f-VariantDir; works most naturally with a subsidiary SConscript file. However, you would then call the subsidiary SConscript file not in the source directory, but in the variant_dir, regardless of the value of duplicate. This is how you tell &scons; which variant of a source tree to build: # run src/SConscript in two variant directories VariantDir('build/variant1', 'src') SConscript('build/variant1/SConscript') VariantDir('build/variant2', 'src') SConscript('build/variant2/SConscript') See also the &f-link-SConscript; function, described above, for another way to specify a variant directory in conjunction with calling a subsidiary SConscript file. Examples: # use names in the build directory, not the source directory VariantDir('build', 'src', duplicate=0) Program('build/prog', 'build/source.c') # this builds both the source and docs in a separate subtree VariantDir('build', '.', duplicate=0) SConscript(dirs=['build/src','build/doc']) # same as previous example, but only uses SConscript SConscript(dirs='src', variant_dir='build/src', duplicate=0) SConscript(dirs='doc', variant_dir='build/doc', duplicate=0) (program, [path, pathext, reject]) Searches for the specified executable program, returning the full path name to the program if it is found, and returning None if not. Searches the specified path, the value of the calling environment's PATH (env['ENV']['PATH']), or the user's current external PATH (os.environ['PATH']) by default. On Windows systems, searches for executable programs with any of the file extensions listed in the specified pathext, the calling environment's PATHEXT (env['ENV']['PATHEXT']) or the user's current PATHEXT (os.environ['PATHEXT']) by default. Will not select any path name or names in the specified reject list, if any.