This appendix contains descriptions of all of the construction variables that are potentially available "out of the box" in this version of SCons. Whether or not setting a construction variable in a construction environment will actually have an effect depends on whether any of the Tools and/or Builders that use the variable have been included in the construction environment.
In this appendix, we have
appended the initial $
(dollar sign) to the beginning of each
variable name when it appears in the text,
but left off the dollar sign
in the left-hand column
where the name appears for each entry.
This construction variable automatically introduces $_LDMODULEVERSIONFLAGS
if $LDMODULEVERSION
is set. Othervise it evaluates to an empty string.
This construction variable automatically introduces $_SHLIBVERSIONFLAGS
if $SHLIBVERSION
is set. Othervise it evaluates to an empty string.
The static library archiver.
Specifies the system architecture for which
the package is being built.
The default is the system architecture
of the machine on which SCons is running.
This is used to fill in the
Architecture:
field in an Ipkg
control
file,
and as part of the name of a generated RPM file.
The command line used to generate a static library from object files.
The string displayed when an object file
is generated from an assembly-language source file.
If this is not set, then $ARCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(ARCOMSTR = "Archiving $TARGET")
General options passed to the static library archiver.
The assembler.
The command line used to generate an object file from an assembly-language source file.
The string displayed when an object file
is generated from an assembly-language source file.
If this is not set, then $ASCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(ASCOMSTR = "Assembling $TARGET")
General options passed to the assembler.
The command line used to assemble an assembly-language
source file into an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified
in the $ASFLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when an object file
is generated from an assembly-language source file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $ASPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(ASPPCOMSTR = "Assembling $TARGET")
General options when an assembling an assembly-language
source file into an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
The default is to use the value of $ASFLAGS
.
The bibliography generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The command line used to call the bibliography generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The string displayed when generating a bibliography
for TeX or LaTeX.
If this is not set, then $BIBTEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(BIBTEXCOMSTR = "Generating bibliography $TARGET")
General options passed to the bibliography generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
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
The C compiler.
The command line used to compile a C source file to a (static) object
file. Any options specified in the $CFLAGS
, $CCFLAGS
and
$CPPFLAGS
construction variables are included on this command
line.
The string displayed when a C source file
is compiled to a (static) object file.
If this is not set, then $CCCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(CCCOMSTR = "Compiling static object $TARGET")
General options that are passed to the C and C++ compilers.
Options added to the compiler command line
to support building with precompiled headers.
The default value expands expands to the appropriate
Microsoft Visual C++ command-line options
when the $PCH
construction variable is set.
Options added to the compiler command line
to support storing debugging information in a
Microsoft Visual C++ PDB file.
The default value expands expands to appropriate
Microsoft Visual C++ command-line options
when the $PDB
construction variable is set.
The Visual C++ compiler option that SCons uses by default
to generate PDB information is /Z7
.
This works correctly with parallel (-j
) builds
because it embeds the debug information in the intermediate object files,
as opposed to sharing a single PDB file between multiple object files.
This is also the only way to get debug information
embedded into a static library.
Using the /Zi
instead may yield improved
link-time performance,
although parallel builds will no longer work.
You can generate PDB files with the /Zi
switch by overriding the default $CCPDBFLAGS
variable as follows:
env['CCPDBFLAGS'] = ['${(PDB and "/Zi /Fd%s" % File(PDB)) or ""}']
An alternative would be to use the /Zi
to put the debugging information in a separate .pdb
file for each object file by overriding
the $CCPDBFLAGS
variable as follows:
env['CCPDBFLAGS'] = '/Zi /Fd${TARGET}.pdb'
The version number of the C compiler. This may or may not be set, depending on the specific C compiler being used.
The suffix for C source files.
This is used by the internal CFile builder
when generating C files from Lex (.l) or YACC (.y) input files.
The default suffix, of course, is
.c
(lower case).
On case-insensitive systems (like Windows),
SCons also treats
.C
(upper case) files
as C files.
General options that are passed to the C compiler (C only; not C++).
A hook for modifying the file that controls the packaging build
(the .spec
for RPM,
the control
for Ipkg,
the .wxs
for MSI).
If set, the function will be called
after the SCons template for the file has been written.
XXX
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.)
The name of a file containing the change log text
to be included in the package.
This is included as the
%changelog
section of the RPM
.spec
file.
A function used to produce variables like $_CPPINCFLAGS
. It takes
four or five
arguments: a prefix to concatenate onto each element, a list of
elements, a suffix to concatenate onto each element, an environment
for variable interpolation, and an optional function that will be
called to transform the list before concatenation.
env['_CPPINCFLAGS'] = '$( ${_concat(INCPREFIX, CPPPATH, INCSUFFIX, __env__, RDirs)} $)',
The name of the directory in which
Configure context test files are written.
The default is
.sconf_temp
in the top-level directory
containing the
SConstruct
file.
The name of the Configure context log file.
The default is
config.log
in the top-level directory
containing the
SConstruct
file.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the C preprocessor command-line options
to define values.
The value of $_CPPDEFFLAGS
is created
by appending $CPPDEFPREFIX
and $CPPDEFSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each definition in $CPPDEFINES
.
A platform independent specification of C preprocessor definitions.
The definitions will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_CPPDEFFLAGS
construction variable (see above),
which is constructed according to
the type of value of $CPPDEFINES
:
If $CPPDEFINES
is a string,
the values of the
$CPPDEFPREFIX
and $CPPDEFSUFFIX
construction variables
will be added to the beginning and end.
# Will add -Dxyz to POSIX compiler command lines, # and /Dxyz to Microsoft Visual C++ command lines. env = Environment(CPPDEFINES='xyz')
If $CPPDEFINES
is a list,
the values of the
$CPPDEFPREFIX
and $CPPDEFSUFFIX
construction variables
will be appended to the beginning and end
of each element in the list.
If any element is a list or tuple,
then the first item is the name being
defined and the second item is its value:
# Will add -DB=2 -DA to POSIX compiler command lines, # and /DB=2 /DA to Microsoft Visual C++ command lines. env = Environment(CPPDEFINES=[('B', 2), 'A'])
If $CPPDEFINES
is a dictionary,
the values of the
$CPPDEFPREFIX
and $CPPDEFSUFFIX
construction variables
will be appended to the beginning and end
of each item from the dictionary.
The key of each dictionary item
is a name being defined
to the dictionary item's corresponding value;
if the value is
None
,
then the name is defined without an explicit value.
Note that the resulting flags are sorted by keyword
to ensure that the order of the options on the
command line is consistent each time
scons
is run.
# Will add -DA -DB=2 to POSIX compiler command lines, # and /DA /DB=2 to Microsoft Visual C++ command lines. env = Environment(CPPDEFINES={'B':2, 'A':None})
The prefix used to specify preprocessor definitions
on the C compiler command line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each definition
in the $CPPDEFINES
construction variable
when the $_CPPDEFFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify preprocessor definitions
on the C compiler command line.
This will be appended to the end of each definition
in the $CPPDEFINES
construction variable
when the $_CPPDEFFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
User-specified C preprocessor options.
These will be included in any command that uses the C preprocessor,
including not just compilation of C and C++ source files
via the $CCCOM
,
$SHCCCOM
,
$CXXCOM
and
$SHCXXCOM
command lines,
but also the $FORTRANPPCOM
,
$SHFORTRANPPCOM
,
$F77PPCOM
and
$SHF77PPCOM
command lines
used to compile a Fortran source file,
and the $ASPPCOM
command line
used to assemble an assembly language source file,
after first running each file through the C preprocessor.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $CPPPATH
.
See $_CPPINCFLAGS
, below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the C preprocessor command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_CPPINCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $CPPPATH
.
The list of directories that the C preprocessor will search for include
directories. The C/C++ implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in CCFLAGS or CXXFLAGS because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in CPPPATH will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
env = Environment(CPPPATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(CPPPATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_CPPINCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $CPPPATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the CPPPATH directory list should
include $_CPPINCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(CCCOM="my_compiler $_CPPINCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The list of suffixes of files that will be scanned for C preprocessor implicit dependencies (#include lines). The default list is:
[".c", ".C", ".cxx", ".cpp", ".c++", ".cc", ".h", ".H", ".hxx", ".hpp", ".hh", ".F", ".fpp", ".FPP", ".m", ".mm", ".S", ".spp", ".SPP"]
The C++ compiler.
The command line used to compile a C++ source file to an object file.
Any options specified in the $CXXFLAGS
and
$CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a C++ source file
is compiled to a (static) object file.
If this is not set, then $CXXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(CXXCOMSTR = "Compiling static object $TARGET")
The suffix for C++ source files.
This is used by the internal CXXFile builder
when generating C++ files from Lex (.ll) or YACC (.yy) input files.
The default suffix is
.cc
.
SCons also treats files with the suffixes
.cpp
,
.cxx
,
.c++
,
and
.C++
as C++ files,
and files with
.mm
suffixes as Objective C++ files.
On case-sensitive systems (Linux, UNIX, and other POSIX-alikes),
SCons also treats
.C
(upper case) files
as C++ files.
General options that are passed to the C++ compiler.
By default, this includes the value of $CCFLAGS
,
so that setting $CCFLAGS
affects both C and C++ compilation.
If you want to add C++-specific flags,
you must set or override the value of $CXXFLAGS
.
The version number of the C++ compiler. This may or may not be set, depending on the specific C++ compiler being used.
The D compiler to use.
The D compiler to use.
The D compiler to use.
The command line used to compile a D file to an object file.
Any options specified in the $DFLAGS
construction variable
is included on this command line.
The command line used to compile a D file to an object file.
Any options specified in the $DFLAGS
construction variable
is included on this command line.
The command line used to compile a D file to an object file.
Any options specified in the $DFLAGS
construction variable
is included on this command line.
List of debug tags to enable when compiling.
List of debug tags to enable when compiling.
List of debug tags to enable when compiling.
DDEBUGPREFIX.
DDEBUGPREFIX.
DDEBUGPREFIX.
DDEBUGSUFFIX.
DDEBUGSUFFIX.
DDEBUGSUFFIX.
A long description of the project being packaged. This is included in the relevant section of the file that controls the packaging build.
A language-specific long description for
the specified lang
.
This is used to populate a
%description -l
section of an RPM
.spec
file.
DFILESUFFIX.
DFILESUFFIX.
DFILESUFFIX.
DFLAGPREFIX.
DFLAGPREFIX.
DFLAGPREFIX.
General options that are passed to the D compiler.
General options that are passed to the D compiler.
General options that are passed to the D compiler.
DFLAGSUFFIX.
DFLAGSUFFIX.
DFLAGSUFFIX.
DINCPREFIX.
DINCPREFIX.
DINCPREFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
A function that converts a string into a Dir instance relative to the target being built.
A function that converts a string into a Dir instance relative to the target being built.
A function that converts a list of strings into a list of Dir instances relative to the target being built.
Name of the lib tool to use for D codes.
Name of the lib tool to use for D codes.
Name of the lib tool to use for D codes.
The command line to use when creating libraries.
The command line to use when creating libraries.
The command line to use when creating libraries.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
DLIBFLAGPREFIX.
DLIBFLAGPREFIX.
DLIBFLAGPREFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
DLIBFLAGSUFFIX.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKPREFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
DLIBLINKSUFFIX.
Name of the linker to use for linking systems including D sources.
Name of the linker to use for linking systems including D sources.
Name of the linker to use for linking systems including D sources.
The command line to use when linking systems including D sources.
The command line to use when linking systems including D sources.
The command line to use when linking systems including D sources.
DLINKFLAGPREFIX.
DLINKFLAGPREFIX.
DLINKFLAGPREFIX.
List of linker flags.
List of linker flags.
List of linker flags.
DLINKFLAGSUFFIX.
DLINKFLAGSUFFIX.
DLINKFLAGSUFFIX.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookEpub
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookHtml
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookHtmlChunked
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookHtmlhelp
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookMan
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookPdf
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookSlidesHtml
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The default XSLT file for the DocbookSlidesPdf
builder within the
current environment, if no other XSLT gets specified via keyword.
The path to the PDF renderer fop
or xep
,
if one of them is installed (fop
gets checked first).
The full command-line for the
PDF renderer fop
or xep
.
The string displayed when a renderer like fop
or
xep
is used to create PDF output from an XML file.
Additonal command-line flags for the
PDF renderer fop
or xep
.
The path to the external executable xmllint
, if it's installed.
Note, that this is only used as last fallback for resolving
XIncludes, if no libxml2 or lxml Python binding can be imported
in the current system.
The full command-line for the external executable
xmllint
.
The string displayed when xmllint
is used to resolve
XIncludes for a given XML file.
Additonal command-line flags for the external executable
xmllint
.
The path to the external executable xsltproc
(or saxon
, xalan
), if one of them
is installed.
Note, that this is only used as last fallback for XSL transformations, if
no libxml2 or lxml Python binding can be imported in the current system.
The full command-line for the external executable
xsltproc
(or saxon
,
xalan
).
The string displayed when xsltproc
is used to transform
an XML file via a given XSLT stylesheet.
Additonal command-line flags for the external executable
xsltproc
(or saxon
,
xalan
).
Additonal parameters that are not intended for the XSLT processor executable, but
the XSL processing itself. By default, they get appended at the end of the command line
for saxon
and saxon-xslt
, respectively.
List of paths to search for import modules.
List of paths to search for import modules.
List of paths to search for import modules.
DRPATHPREFIX.
DRPATHSUFFIX.
DShLibSonameGenerator.
The list of suffixes of files that will be scanned for imported D package files. The default list is:
['.d']
DVERPREFIX.
DVERPREFIX.
DVERPREFIX.
List of version tags to enable when compiling.
List of version tags to enable when compiling.
List of version tags to enable when compiling.
DVERSUFFIX.
DVERSUFFIX.
DVERSUFFIX.
The TeX DVI file to PDF file converter.
The command line used to convert TeX DVI files into a PDF file.
The string displayed when a TeX DVI file
is converted into a PDF file.
If this is not set, then $DVIPDFCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
General options passed to the TeX DVI file to PDF file converter.
The TeX DVI file to PostScript converter.
General options passed to the TeX DVI file to PostScript converter.
A dictionary of environment variables
to use when invoking commands. When
$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 will be called to escape shell special characters in command lines. The function should take one argument: the command line string to escape; and should return the escaped command line.
The Fortran 03 compiler.
You should normally set the $FORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $F03
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 03 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 03 source file to an object file.
You only need to set $F03COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 03 source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $F03COM
or $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the F03 dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f03']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran 03 compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $F03PATH
.
See
$_F03INCFLAGS
below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
You only need to set $F03FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran 03 compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_F03INCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F03PATH
.
The list of directories that the Fortran 03 compiler will search for include
directories. The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $F03FLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in $F03PATH
will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
You only need to set $F03PATH
if you need to define a specific
include path for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPATH
variable,
which specifies the include path
for the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
env = Environment(F03PATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(F03PATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_F03INCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F03PATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the F03PATH directory list should
include $_F03INCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(F03COM="my_compiler $_F03INCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran 03 source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $F03FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $F03PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 03 source file
is compiled to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $F03PPCOM
or $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for F03 dialect will be used. By default, this is empty
The Fortran 08 compiler.
You should normally set the $FORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $F08
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 08 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 08 source file to an object file.
You only need to set $F08COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 08 source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $F08COM
or $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the F08 dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f08']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran 08 compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $F08PATH
.
See
$_F08INCFLAGS
below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
You only need to set $F08FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran 08 compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_F08INCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F08PATH
.
The list of directories that the Fortran 08 compiler will search for include
directories. The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $F08FLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in $F08PATH
will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
You only need to set $F08PATH
if you need to define a specific
include path for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPATH
variable,
which specifies the include path
for the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
env = Environment(F08PATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(F08PATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_F08INCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F08PATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the F08PATH directory list should
include $_F08INCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(F08COM="my_compiler $_F08INCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran 08 source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $F08FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $F08PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 08 source file
is compiled to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $F08PPCOM
or $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for F08 dialect will be used. By default, this is empty
The Fortran 77 compiler.
You should normally set the $FORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $F77
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 77 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 77 source file to an object file.
You only need to set $F77COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 77 source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $F77COM
or $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the F77 dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f77']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran 77 compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $F77PATH
.
See
$_F77INCFLAGS
below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
You only need to set $F77FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran 77 compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_F77INCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F77PATH
.
The list of directories that the Fortran 77 compiler will search for include
directories. The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $F77FLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in $F77PATH
will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
You only need to set $F77PATH
if you need to define a specific
include path for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPATH
variable,
which specifies the include path
for the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
env = Environment(F77PATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(F77PATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_F77INCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F77PATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the F77PATH directory list should
include $_F77INCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(F77COM="my_compiler $_F77INCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran 77 source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $F77FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $F77PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 77 source file
is compiled to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $F77PPCOM
or $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for F77 dialect will be used. By default, this is empty
The Fortran 90 compiler.
You should normally set the $FORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $F90
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 90 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 90 source file to an object file.
You only need to set $F90COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 90 source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $F90COM
or $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the F90 dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f90']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran 90 compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $F90PATH
.
See
$_F90INCFLAGS
below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
You only need to set $F90FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran 90 compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_F90INCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F90PATH
.
The list of directories that the Fortran 90 compiler will search for include
directories. The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $F90FLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in $F90PATH
will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
You only need to set $F90PATH
if you need to define a specific
include path for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPATH
variable,
which specifies the include path
for the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
env = Environment(F90PATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(F90PATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_F90INCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F90PATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the F90PATH directory list should
include $_F90INCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(F90COM="my_compiler $_F90INCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran 90 source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $F90FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $F90PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 90 source file
is compiled after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $F90PPCOM
or $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for F90 dialect will be used. By default, this is empty
The Fortran 95 compiler.
You should normally set the $FORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $F95
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 95 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 95 source file to an object file.
You only need to set $F95COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 95 source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $F95COM
or $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the F95 dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f95']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran 95 compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $F95PATH
.
See
$_F95INCFLAGS
below,
for the variable that expands to those options.
You only need to set $F95FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran 95 compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include files.
The value of $_F95INCFLAGS
is created
by appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F95PATH
.
The list of directories that the Fortran 95 compiler will search for include
directories. The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $F95FLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in $F95PATH
will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
You only need to set $F95PATH
if you need to define a specific
include path for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPATH
variable,
which specifies the include path
for the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
env = Environment(F95PATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(F95PATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_F95INCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $F95PATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the F95PATH directory list should
include $_F95INCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(F95COM="my_compiler $_F95INCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran 95 source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $F95FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $F95PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $FORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 95 source file
is compiled to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $F95PPCOM
or $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for F95 dialect will be used. By default, this is empty
A function that converts a string into a File instance relative to the target being built.
A function that converts a string into a File instance relative to the target being built.
The default Fortran compiler for all versions of Fortran.
The command line used to compile a Fortran source file to an object file.
By default, any options specified
in the $FORTRANFLAGS
,
$CPPFLAGS
,
$_CPPDEFFLAGS
,
$_FORTRANMODFLAG
, and
$_FORTRANINCFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a Fortran source file
is compiled to an object file.
If this is not set, then $FORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the FORTRAN dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.f', '.for', '.ftn']
General user-specified options that are passed to the Fortran compiler.
Note that this variable does
not
contain
-I
(or similar) include or module search path options
that scons generates automatically from $FORTRANPATH
.
See
$_FORTRANINCFLAGS
and $_FORTRANMODFLAG
,
below,
for the variables that expand those options.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran compiler command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for include
files and module files.
The value of $_FORTRANINCFLAGS
is created
by prepending/appending $INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $FORTRANPATH
.
Directory location where the Fortran compiler should place any module files it generates. This variable is empty, by default. Some Fortran compilers will internally append this directory in the search path for module files, as well.
The prefix used to specify a module directory on the Fortran compiler command
line.
This will be appended to the beginning of the directory
in the $FORTRANMODDIR
construction variables
when the $_FORTRANMODFLAG
variables is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify a module directory on the Fortran compiler command
line.
This will be appended to the beginning of the directory
in the $FORTRANMODDIR
construction variables
when the $_FORTRANMODFLAG
variables is automatically generated.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the Fortran compiler command-line option
for specifying the directory location where the Fortran
compiler should place any module files that happen to get
generated during compilation.
The value of $_FORTRANMODFLAG
is created
by prepending/appending $FORTRANMODDIRPREFIX
and
$FORTRANMODDIRSUFFIX
to the beginning and end of the directory in $FORTRANMODDIR
.
The module file prefix used by the Fortran compiler. SCons assumes that
the Fortran compiler follows the quasi-standard naming convention for
module files of
module_name.mod
.
As a result, this variable is left empty, by default. For situations in
which the compiler does not necessarily follow the normal convention,
the user may use this variable. Its value will be appended to every
module file name as scons attempts to resolve dependencies.
The module file suffix used by the Fortran compiler. SCons assumes that
the Fortran compiler follows the quasi-standard naming convention for
module files of
module_name.mod
.
As a result, this variable is set to ".mod", by default. For situations
in which the compiler does not necessarily follow the normal convention,
the user may use this variable. Its value will be appended to every
module file name as scons attempts to resolve dependencies.
The list of directories that the Fortran compiler will search for
include files and (for some compilers) module files. The Fortran implicit
dependency scanner will search these directories for include files (but
not module files since they are autogenerated and, as such, may not
actually exist at the time the scan takes place). Don't explicitly put
include directory arguments in FORTRANFLAGS because the result will be
non-portable and the directories will not be searched by the dependency
scanner. Note: directory names in FORTRANPATH will be looked-up relative
to the SConscript directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
env = Environment(FORTRANPATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(FORTRANPATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_FORTRANINCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$INCPREFIX
and $INCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $FORTRANPATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the FORTRANPATH directory list should
include $_FORTRANINCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(FORTRANCOM="my_compiler $_FORTRANINCFLAGS -c -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The command line used to compile a Fortran source file to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
By default, any options specified in the $FORTRANFLAGS
,
$CPPFLAGS
,
$_CPPDEFFLAGS
,
$_FORTRANMODFLAG
, and
$_FORTRANINCFLAGS
construction variables are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a Fortran source file
is compiled to an object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $FORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The list of file extensions for which the compilation + preprocessor pass for FORTRAN dialect will be used. By default, this is ['.fpp', '.FPP']
The list of suffixes of files that will be scanned for Fortran implicit dependencies (INCLUDE lines and USE statements). The default list is:
[".f", ".F", ".for", ".FOR", ".ftn", ".FTN", ".fpp", ".FPP", ".f77", ".F77", ".f90", ".F90", ".f95", ".F95"]
On Mac OS X with gcc,
a list containing the paths to search for frameworks.
Used by the compiler to find framework-style includes like
#include <Fmwk/Header.h>.
Used by the linker to find user-specified frameworks when linking (see
$FRAMEWORKS
).
For example:
env.AppendUnique(FRAMEWORKPATH='#myframeworkdir')
will add
... -Fmyframeworkdir
to the compiler and linker command lines.
On Mac OS X with gcc, an automatically-generated construction variable
containing the linker command-line options corresponding to
$FRAMEWORKPATH
.
On Mac OS X with gcc, the prefix to be used for the FRAMEWORKPATH entries.
(see $FRAMEWORKPATH
).
The default value is
-F
.
On Mac OS X with gcc,
the prefix to be used for linking in frameworks
(see $FRAMEWORKS
).
The default value is
-framework
.
On Mac OS X with gcc, an automatically-generated construction variable containing the linker command-line options for linking with FRAMEWORKS.
On Mac OS X with gcc, a list of the framework names to be linked into a program or shared library or bundle. The default value is the empty list. For example:
env.AppendUnique(FRAMEWORKS=Split('System Cocoa SystemConfiguration'))
On Mac OS X with gcc,
general user-supplied frameworks options to be added at
the end of a command
line building a loadable module.
(This has been largely superseded by
the $FRAMEWORKPATH
, $FRAMEWORKPATHPREFIX
,
$FRAMEWORKPREFIX
and $FRAMEWORKS
variables
described above.)
The Ghostscript program used, e.g. to convert PostScript to PDF files.
The full Ghostscript command line used for the conversion process. Its default
value is “$GS $GSFLAGS -sOutputFile=$TARGET $SOURCES
”.
The string displayed when
Ghostscript is called for the conversion process.
If this is not set (the default), then $GSCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
General options passed to the Ghostscript program,
when converting PostScript to PDF files for example. Its default value
is “-dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -sDEVICE=pdfwrite
”
Sets the host architecture for Visual Studio compiler. If not set, default to the detected host architecture: note that this may depend on the python you are using. This variable must be passed as an argument to the Environment() constructor; setting it later has no effect.
Valid values are the same as for $TARGET_ARCH
.
This is currently only used on Windows, but in the future it will be used on other OSes as well.
The name of the host hardware architecture used to create the Environment. If a platform is specified when creating the Environment, then that Platform's logic will handle setting this value. This value is immutable, and should not be changed by the user after the Environment is initialized. Currently only set for Win32.
The name of the host operating system used to create the Environment. If a platform is specified when creating the Environment, then that Platform's logic will handle setting this value. This value is immutable, and should not be changed by the user after the Environment is initialized. Currently only set for Win32.
The list of suffixes of files that will be scanned for IDL implicit dependencies (#include or import lines). The default list is:
[".idl", ".IDL"]
Used to override $SHLIBNOVERSIONSYMLINKS
/$LDMODULENOVERSIONSYMLINKS
when
creating versioned import library for a shared library/loadable module. If not defined,
then $SHLIBNOVERSIONSYMLINKS
/$LDMODULENOVERSIONSYMLINKS
is used to determine
whether to disable symlink generation or not.
The prefix used for import library names. For example, cygwin uses import
libraries (libfoo.dll.a
) in pair with dynamic libraries
(cygfoo.dll
). The cyglink
linker sets
$IMPLIBPREFIX
to 'lib'
and $SHLIBPREFIX
to 'cyg'
.
The suffix used for import library names. For example, cygwin uses import
libraries (libfoo.dll.a
) in pair with dynamic libraries
(cygfoo.dll
). The cyglink
linker sets
$IMPLIBSUFFIX
to '.dll.a'
and $SHLIBSUFFIX
to '.dll'
.
Used to override $SHLIBVERSION
/$LDMODULEVERSION
when
generating versioned import library for a shared library/loadable module. If
undefined, the $SHLIBVERSION
/$LDMODULEVERSION
is used to
determine the version of versioned import library.
Controls whether or not SCons will add implicit dependencies for the commands executed to build targets.
By default, SCons will add
to each target
an implicit dependency on the command
represented by the first argument on any
command line it executes.
The specific file for the dependency is
found by searching the
PATH
variable in the
ENV
environment used to execute the command.
If the construction variable
$IMPLICIT_COMMAND_DEPENDENCIES
is set to a false value
(None
,
False
,
0
,
etc.),
then the implicit dependency will
not be added to the targets
built with that construction environment.
env = Environment(IMPLICIT_COMMAND_DEPENDENCIES = 0)
The prefix used to specify an include directory on the C compiler command
line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each directory
in the $CPPPATH
and $FORTRANPATH
construction variables
when the $_CPPINCFLAGS
and $_FORTRANINCFLAGS
variables are automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify an include directory on the C compiler command
line.
This will be appended to the end of each directory
in the $CPPPATH
and $FORTRANPATH
construction variables
when the $_CPPINCFLAGS
and $_FORTRANINCFLAGS
variables are automatically generated.
A function to be called to install a file into a destination file name. The default function copies the file into the destination (and sets the destination file's mode and permission bits to match the source file's). The function takes the following arguments:
def install(dest, source, env):
dest
is the path name of the destination file.
source
is the path name of the source file.
env
is the construction environment
(a dictionary of construction values)
in force for this file installation.
The string displayed when a file is installed into a destination file name. The default is:
Install file: "$SOURCE" as "$TARGET"
Set by the "intelc" Tool to the major version number of the Intel C compiler selected for use.
The Java archive tool.
The Java archive tool.
The directory to which the Java archive tool should change
(using the
-C
option).
The directory to which the Java archive tool should change
(using the
-C
option).
The command line used to call the Java archive tool.
The command line used to call the Java archive tool.
The string displayed when the Java archive tool
is called
If this is not set, then $JARCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(JARCOMSTR = "JARchiving $SOURCES into $TARGET")
The string displayed when the Java archive tool
is called
If this is not set, then $JARCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(JARCOMSTR = "JARchiving $SOURCES into $TARGET")
General options passed to the Java archive tool.
By default this is set to
cf
to create the necessary
jar
file.
General options passed to the Java archive tool.
By default this is set to
cf
to create the necessary
jar
file.
The suffix for Java archives:
.jar
by default.
The suffix for Java archives:
.jar
by default.
Specifies the list of directories that
will be added to the
javac command line
via the -bootclasspath
option.
The individual directory names will be
separated by the operating system's path separate character
(:
on UNIX/Linux/POSIX,
;
on Windows).
The Java compiler.
The command line used to compile a directory tree containing
Java source files to
corresponding Java class files.
Any options specified in the $JAVACFLAGS
construction variable
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when compiling
a directory tree of Java source files to
corresponding Java class files.
If this is not set, then $JAVACCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(JAVACCOMSTR = "Compiling class files $TARGETS from $SOURCES")
General options that are passed to the Java compiler.
The directory in which Java class files may be found.
This is stripped from the beginning of any Java .class
file names supplied to the
JavaH
builder.
Specifies the list of directories that
will be searched for Java
.class
file.
The directories in this list will be added to the
javac and javah command lines
via the -classpath
option.
The individual directory names will be
separated by the operating system's path separate character
(:
on UNIX/Linux/POSIX,
;
on Windows).
Note that this currently just adds the specified
directory via the -classpath
option.
SCons does not currently search the
$JAVACLASSPATH
directories for dependency
.class
files.
The suffix for Java class files;
.class
by default.
The Java generator for C header and stub files.
The command line used to generate C header and stub files
from Java classes.
Any options specified in the $JAVAHFLAGS
construction variable
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when C header and stub files
are generated from Java classes.
If this is not set, then $JAVAHCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(JAVAHCOMSTR = "Generating header/stub file(s) $TARGETS from $SOURCES")
General options passed to the C header and stub file generator for Java classes.
Specifies the list of directories that
will be searched for input
.java
file.
The directories in this list will be added to the
javac command line
via the -sourcepath
option.
The individual directory names will be
separated by the operating system's path separate character
(:
on UNIX/Linux/POSIX,
;
on Windows).
Note that this currently just adds the specified
directory via the -sourcepath
option.
SCons does not currently search the
$JAVASOURCEPATH
directories for dependency
.java
files.
The suffix for Java files;
.java
by default.
Specifies the Java version being used by the Java
builder.
This is not currently used to select one
version of the Java compiler vs. another.
Instead, you should set this to specify the version of Java
supported by your javac compiler.
The default is 1.4
.
This is sometimes necessary because
Java 1.5 changed the file names that are created
for nested anonymous inner classes,
which can cause a mismatch with the files
that SCons expects will be generated by the javac compiler.
Setting $JAVAVERSION
to 1.5
(or 1.6
, as appropriate)
can make SCons realize that a Java 1.5 or 1.6
build is actually up to date.
The LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The command line used to call the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The string displayed when calling
the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
If this is not set, then $LATEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(LATEXCOMSTR = "Building $TARGET from LaTeX input $SOURCES")
General options passed to the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The maximum number of times that LaTeX
will be re-run if the
.log
generated by the $LATEXCOM
command
indicates that there are undefined references.
The default is to try to resolve undefined references
by re-running LaTeX up to three times.
The list of suffixes of files that will be scanned
for LaTeX implicit dependencies
(\include
or \import
files).
The default list is:
[".tex", ".ltx", ".latex"]
The linker for building loadable modules.
By default, this is the same as $SHLINK
.
The command line for building loadable modules.
On Mac OS X, this uses the $LDMODULE
,
$LDMODULEFLAGS
and
$FRAMEWORKSFLAGS
variables.
On other systems, this is the same as $SHLINK
.
The string displayed when building loadable modules.
If this is not set, then $LDMODULECOM
(the command line) is displayed.
General user options passed to the linker for building loadable modules.
Instructs the LoadableModule
builder to not automatically create symlinks
for versioned modules. Defaults to $SHLIBNOVERSIONSYMLINKS
The prefix used for loadable module file names.
On Mac OS X, this is null;
on other systems, this is
the same as $SHLIBPREFIX
.
A macro that automatically generates loadable module's SONAME based on $TARGET,
$LDMODULEVERSION and $LDMODULESUFFIX. Used by LoadableModule
builder
when the linker tool supports SONAME (e.g. gnulink
).
The suffix used for loadable module file names. On Mac OS X, this is null; on other systems, this is the same as $SHLIBSUFFIX.
When this construction variable is defined, a versioned loadable module
is created by LoadableModule
builder. This activates the
$_LDMODULEVERSIONFLAGS
and thus modifies the $LDMODULECOM
as
required, adds the version number to the library name, and creates the symlinks
that are needed. $LDMODULEVERSION
versions should exist in the same
format as $SHLIBVERSION
.
Extra flags added to $LDMODULECOM
when building versioned
LoadableModule
. These flags are only used when $LDMODULEVERSION
is
set.
This macro automatically introduces extra flags to $LDMODULECOM
when
building versioned LoadableModule
(that is when
$LDMODULEVERSION
is set). _LDMODULEVERSIONFLAGS
usually adds $SHLIBVERSIONFLAGS
and some extra dynamically generated
options (such as -Wl,-soname=$_LDMODULESONAME
). It is unused
by plain (unversioned) loadable modules.
The lexical analyzer generator.
The command line used to call the lexical analyzer generator to generate a source file.
The string displayed when generating a source file
using the lexical analyzer generator.
If this is not set, then $LEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(LEXCOMSTR = "Lex'ing $TARGET from $SOURCES")
General options passed to the lexical analyzer generator.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the linker command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for library.
The value of $_LIBDIRFLAGS
is created
by appending $LIBDIRPREFIX
and $LIBDIRSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $LIBPATH
.
The prefix used to specify a library directory on the linker command line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each directory
in the $LIBPATH
construction variable
when the $_LIBDIRFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify a library directory on the linker command line.
This will be appended to the end of each directory
in the $LIBPATH
construction variable
when the $_LIBDIRFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
TODO
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the linker command-line options
for specifying libraries to be linked with the resulting target.
The value of $_LIBFLAGS
is created
by appending $LIBLINKPREFIX
and $LIBLINKSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each filename in $LIBS
.
The prefix used to specify a library to link on the linker command line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each library
in the $LIBS
construction variable
when the $_LIBFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify a library to link on the linker command line.
This will be appended to the end of each library
in the $LIBS
construction variable
when the $_LIBFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
The list of directories that will be searched for libraries.
The implicit dependency scanner will search these
directories for include files. Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in $LINKFLAGS
or $SHLINKFLAGS
because the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner. Note:
directory names in LIBPATH will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command. To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
env = Environment(LIBPATH='#/libs')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
libs = Dir('libs') env = Environment(LIBPATH=libs)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_LIBDIRFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$LIBDIRPREFIX
and $LIBDIRSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $LIBPATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the LIBPATH directory list should
include $_LIBDIRFLAGS
:
env = Environment(LINKCOM="my_linker $_LIBDIRFLAGS $_LIBFLAGS -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
The prefix used for (static) library file names. A default value is set for each platform (posix, win32, os2, etc.), but the value is overridden by individual tools (ar, mslib, sgiar, sunar, tlib, etc.) to reflect the names of the libraries they create.
A list of all legal prefixes for library file names.
When searching for library dependencies,
SCons will look for files with these prefixes,
the base library name,
and suffixes in the $LIBSUFFIXES
list.
A list of one or more libraries that will be linked with any executable programs created by this environment.
The library list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_LIBFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$LIBLINKPREFIX
and $LIBLINKSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each filename in $LIBS
.
Any command lines you define that need
the LIBS library list should
include $_LIBFLAGS
:
env = Environment(LINKCOM="my_linker $_LIBDIRFLAGS $_LIBFLAGS -o $TARGET $SOURCE")
If you add a
File
object to the
$LIBS
list, the name of that file will be added to
$_LIBFLAGS
,
and thus the link line, as is, without
$LIBLINKPREFIX
or
$LIBLINKSUFFIX
.
For example:
env.Append(LIBS=File('/tmp/mylib.so'))
In all cases, scons will add dependencies from the executable program to all the libraries in this list.
The suffix used for (static) library file names. A default value is set for each platform (posix, win32, os2, etc.), but the value is overridden by individual tools (ar, mslib, sgiar, sunar, tlib, etc.) to reflect the names of the libraries they create.
A list of all legal suffixes for library file names.
When searching for library dependencies,
SCons will look for files with prefixes, in the $LIBPREFIXES
list,
the base library name,
and these suffixes.
The abbreviated name of the license under which this project is released (gpl, lpgl, bsd etc.). See http://www.opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical for a list of license names.
The separator used by the Substfile
and Textfile
builders.
This value is used between sources when constructing the target.
It defaults to the current system line separator.
The $LINGUAS_FILE
defines file(s) containing list of additional linguas
to be processed by POInit
, POUpdate
or MOFiles
builders. It also affects Translate
builder. If the variable contains
a string, it defines name of the list file. The $LINGUAS_FILE
may be a
list of file names as well. If $LINGUAS_FILE
is set to
True
(or non-zero numeric value), the list will be read from
default file named
LINGUAS
.
The linker.
The command line used to link object files into an executable.
The string displayed when object files
are linked into an executable.
If this is not set, then $LINKCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(LINKCOMSTR = "Linking $TARGET")
General user options passed to the linker.
Note that this variable should
not
contain
-l
(or similar) options for linking with the libraries listed in $LIBS
,
nor
-L
(or similar) library search path options
that scons generates automatically from $LIBPATH
.
See
$_LIBFLAGS
above,
for the variable that expands to library-link options,
and
$_LIBDIRFLAGS
above,
for the variable that expands to library search path options.
The M4 macro preprocessor.
The command line used to pass files through the M4 macro preprocessor.
The string displayed when
a file is passed through the M4 macro preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $M4COM
(the command line) is displayed.
General options passed to the M4 macro preprocessor.
The makeindex generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The command line used to call the makeindex generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The string displayed when calling the makeindex generator for the
TeX formatter and typesetter
and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
If this is not set, then $MAKEINDEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
General options passed to the makeindex generator for the TeX formatter and typesetter and the LaTeX structured formatter and typesetter.
The maximum number of characters allowed on an external command line. On Win32 systems, link lines longer than this many characters are linked via a temporary file name.
The Microsoft IDL compiler.
The command line used to pass files to the Microsoft IDL compiler.
The string displayed when
the Microsoft IDL copmiler is called.
If this is not set, then $MIDLCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
General options passed to the Microsoft IDL compiler.
Suffix used for MO
files (default: '.mo'
).
See msgfmt
tool and MOFiles
builder.
Absolute path to msgfmt(1) binary, found by
Detect()
.
See msgfmt
tool and MOFiles
builder.
Complete command line to run msgfmt(1) program.
See msgfmt
tool and MOFiles
builder.
String to display when msgfmt(1) is invoked
(default: ''
, which means ``print $MSGFMTCOM
'').
See msgfmt
tool and MOFiles
builder.
Additional flags to msgfmt(1).
See msgfmt
tool and MOFiles
builder.
Path to msginit(1) program (found via
Detect()
).
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
Complete command line to run msginit(1) program.
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
String to display when msginit(1) is invoked
(default: ''
, which means ``print $MSGINITCOM
'').
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
List of additional flags to msginit(1) (default:
[]
).
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
Internal ``macro''. Computes locale (language) name based on target filename
(default: '${TARGET.filebase}'
).
Absolute path to msgmerge(1) binary as found by
Detect()
.
See msgmerge
tool and POUpdate
builder.
Complete command line to run msgmerge(1) command.
See msgmerge
tool and POUpdate
builder.
String to be displayed when msgmerge(1) is invoked
(default: ''
, which means ``print $MSGMERGECOM
'').
See msgmerge
tool and POUpdate
builder.
Additional flags to msgmerge(1) command.
See msgmerge
tool and POUpdate
builder.
The directory containing the Microsoft SDK (either Platform SDK or Windows SDK) to be used for compilation.
The version string of the Microsoft SDK
(either Platform SDK or Windows SDK)
to be used for compilation.
Supported versions include
6.1
,
6.0A
,
6.0
,
2003R2
and
2003R1
.
When set to any true value,
specifies that SCons should batch
compilation of object files
when calling the Microsoft Visual C/C++ compiler.
All compilations of source files from the same source directory
that generate target files in a same output directory
and were configured in SCons using the same construction environment
will be built in a single call to the compiler.
Only source files that have changed since their
object files were built will be passed to each compiler invocation
(via the $CHANGED_SOURCES
construction variable).
Any compilations where the object (target) file base name
(minus the .obj
)
does not match the source file base name
will be compiled separately.
Use a batch script to set up Microsoft Visual Studio compiler
$MSVC_USE_SCRIPT
overrides $MSVC_VERSION
and $TARGET_ARCH
.
If set to the name of a Visual Studio .bat file (e.g. vcvars.bat),
SCons will run that bat file and extract the relevant variables from
the result (typically %INCLUDE%, %LIB%, and %PATH%). Setting
MSVC_USE_SCRIPT to None bypasses the Visual Studio autodetection
entirely; use this if you are running SCons in a Visual Studio cmd
window and importing the shell's environment variables.
Build libraries for a Universal Windows Platform (UWP) Application.
If $MSVC_UWP_APP
is set, the Visual Studio environment will be set up to point
to the Windows Store compatible libraries and Visual Studio runtimes. In doing so,
any libraries that are built will be able to be used in a UWP App and published
to the Windows Store.
This flag will only have an effect with Visual Studio 2015+.
This variable must be passed as an argument to the Environment()
constructor; setting it later has no effect.
Valid values are '1' or '0'
Sets the preferred version of Microsoft Visual C/C++ to use.
If $MSVC_VERSION
is not set, SCons will (by default) select the
latest version of Visual C/C++ installed on your system. If the
specified version isn't installed, tool initialization will fail.
This variable must be passed as an argument to the Environment()
constructor; setting it later has no effect.
Valid values for Windows are
14.0
,
14.0Exp
,
12.0
,
12.0Exp
,
11.0
,
11.0Exp
,
10.0
,
10.0Exp
,
9.0
,
9.0Exp
,
8.0
,
8.0Exp
,
7.1
,
7.0
,
and 6.0
.
Versions ending in Exp
refer to "Express" or
"Express for Desktop" editions.
When the Microsoft Visual Studio tools are initialized, they set up this dictionary with the following keys:
the version of MSVS being used (can be set via
$MSVS_VERSION
)
the available versions of MSVS installed
installed directory of Visual C++
installed directory of Visual Studio
installed directory of the .NET framework
list of installed versions of the .NET framework, sorted latest to oldest.
latest installed version of the .NET framework
installed location of the .NET SDK.
installed location of the Platform SDK.
dictionary of installed Platform SDK modules, where the dictionary keys are keywords for the various modules, and the values are 2-tuples where the first is the release date, and the second is the version number.
If a value isn't set, it wasn't available in the registry.
Sets the architecture for which the generated project(s) should build.
The default value is x86
. amd64
is
also supported by SCons for some Visual Studio versions. Trying to set
$MSVS_ARCH
to an architecture that's not supported for a given Visual
Studio version will generate an error.
The string placed in a generated
Microsoft Visual Studio project file as the value of the
ProjectGUID
attribute. There is no default value. If not
defined, a new GUID is generated.
The path name placed in a generated
Microsoft Visual Studio project file as the value of the
SccAuxPath
attribute if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set. There is
no default value.
The root path of projects in
your SCC workspace, i.e the path under which all project and solution files
will be generated. It is used as a reference path from which the relative
paths of the generated Microsoft Visual Studio project and solution files are
computed. The relative project file path is placed as the value of the
SccLocalPath
attribute of the project file and as the
values of the
SccProjectFilePathRelativizedFromConnection[i]
(where [i]
ranges from 0 to the number of projects in the solution) attributes of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft
Visual Studio solution file. Similarly the relative solution file path is
placed as the values of the SccLocalPath[i]
(where [i]
ranges from 0 to the number of projects in the solution) attributes of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft
Visual Studio solution file. This is used only if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set. The
default value is the current working directory.
The project name placed in
a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file as the value of the
SccProjectName
attribute if the
MSVS_SCC_PROVIDER
construction variable is also set. In this
case the string is also placed in the SccProjectName0
attribute of the GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section
of the Microsoft Visual Studio solution file. There is no default value.
The
string placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file as the value
of the SccProvider
attribute. The string is also placed in
the SccProvider0
attribute of the
GlobalSection(SourceCodeControl)
section of the Microsoft
Visual Studio solution file. There is no default value.
Sets the preferred version of Microsoft Visual Studio to use.
If $MSVS_VERSION
is not
set, SCons will (by default) select the latest version of Visual Studio
installed on your system. So, if you have version 6 and version 7 (MSVS .NET)
installed, it will prefer version 7. You can override this by specifying the
MSVS_VERSION
variable in the Environment initialization,
setting it to the appropriate version ('6.0' or '7.0', for example). If the
specified version isn't installed, tool initialization will fail.
This is obsolete: use $MSVC_VERSION
instead. If $MSVS_VERSION
is
set and $MSVC_VERSION
is not, $MSVC_VERSION
will be set automatically
to $MSVS_VERSION
. If both are set to different values, scons will raise an
error.
The build command line placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file. The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with any specified build targets.
The clean command line placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file. The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with the -c option to remove any specified targets.
The encoding string placed in a
generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file. The default is encoding
Windows-1252
.
The action used to generate Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
The suffix used for Microsoft Visual
Studio project (DSP) files. The default value is .vcproj
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET) or later version, and
.dsp
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
The rebuild command line placed in a generated Microsoft Visual Studio project file. The default is to have Visual Studio invoke SCons with any specified rebuild targets.
The SCons used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio project files. The default is the version of SCons being used to generate the project file.
The default SCons command used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
The sconscript
file (that is, SConstruct
or SConscript
file) that will be invoked by
Visual Studio project files (through the $MSVSSCONSCOM
variable). The
default is the same sconscript file that contains the call to MSVSProject
to build the project file.
The SCons flags used in generated Microsoft Visual Studio project files.
The action used to generate Microsoft Visual Studio solution files.
The suffix used for Microsoft
Visual Studio solution (DSW) files. The default value is
.sln
when using Visual Studio version 7.x (.NET), and
.dsw
when using earlier versions of Visual Studio.
The program used on Windows systems to embed manifests into DLLs and EXEs.
See also $WINDOWS_EMBED_MANIFEST
.
The Windows command line used to embed manifests into executables.
See also $MTSHLIBCOM
.
Flags passed to the $MT
manifest embedding program (Windows only).
The Windows command line used to embed manifests into shared libraries (DLLs).
See also $MTEXECOM
.
The version number of the MetroWerks CodeWarrior C compiler to be used.
A list of installed versions of the MetroWerks CodeWarrior C compiler on this system.
Specfies the name of the project to package.
When set to non-zero,
suppresses creation of a corresponding Windows static import lib by the
SharedLibrary
builder when used with
MinGW, Microsoft Visual Studio or Metrowerks.
This also suppresses creation
of an export (.exp) file
when using Microsoft Visual Studio.
The prefix used for (static) object file names.
The suffix used for (static) object file names.
Specifies the directory where all files in resulting archive will be placed if applicable. The default value is "$NAME-$VERSION".
Selects the package type to build. Currently these are available:
* msi - Microsoft Installer * rpm - Redhat Package Manger * ipkg - Itsy Package Management System * tarbz2 - compressed tar * targz - compressed tar * zip - zip file * src_tarbz2 - compressed tar source * src_targz - compressed tar source * src_zip - zip file source
This may be overridden with the "package_type" command line option.
The version of the package (not the underlying project). This is currently only used by the rpm packager and should reflect changes in the packaging, not the underlying project code itself.
The Microsoft Visual C++ precompiled header that will be used when compiling object files. This variable is ignored by tools other than Microsoft Visual C++. When this variable is defined SCons will add options to the compiler command line to cause it to use the precompiled header, and will also set up the dependencies for the PCH file. Example:
env['PCH'] = 'StdAfx.pch'
The command line used by the
PCH
builder to generated a precompiled header.
The string displayed when generating a precompiled header.
If this is not set, then $PCHCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
A construction variable that, when expanded,
adds the /yD
flag to the command line
only if the $PDB
construction variable is set.
This variable specifies how much of a source file is precompiled. This variable is ignored by tools other than Microsoft Visual C++, or when the PCH variable is not being used. When this variable is define it must be a string that is the name of the header that is included at the end of the precompiled portion of the source files, or the empty string if the "#pragma hrdstop" construct is being used:
env['PCHSTOP'] = 'StdAfx.h'
The Microsoft Visual C++ PDB file that will store debugging information for object files, shared libraries, and programs. This variable is ignored by tools other than Microsoft Visual C++. When this variable is defined SCons will add options to the compiler and linker command line to cause them to generate external debugging information, and will also set up the dependencies for the PDB file. Example:
env['PDB'] = 'hello.pdb'
The Visual C++ compiler switch that SCons uses by default
to generate PDB information is /Z7
.
This works correctly with parallel (-j
) builds
because it embeds the debug information in the intermediate object files,
as opposed to sharing a single PDB file between multiple object files.
This is also the only way to get debug information
embedded into a static library.
Using the /Zi
instead may yield improved
link-time performance,
although parallel builds will no longer work.
You can generate PDB files with the /Zi
switch by overriding the default $CCPDBFLAGS
variable;
see the entry for that variable for specific examples.
A deprecated synonym for $DVIPDFCOM
.
The pdflatex utility.
The command line used to call the pdflatex utility.
The string displayed when calling the pdflatex utility.
If this is not set, then $PDFLATEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(PDFLATEX;COMSTR = "Building $TARGET from LaTeX input $SOURCES")
General options passed to the pdflatex utility.
The prefix used for PDF file names.
The suffix used for PDF file names.
The pdftex utility.
The command line used to call the pdftex utility.
The string displayed when calling the pdftex utility.
If this is not set, then $PDFTEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(PDFTEXCOMSTR = "Building $TARGET from TeX input $SOURCES")
General options passed to the pdftex utility.
On Solaris systems,
the package-checking program that will
be used (along with $PKGINFO
)
to look for installed versions of
the Sun PRO C++ compiler.
The default is
/usr/sbin/pgkchk
.
On Solaris systems,
the package information program that will
be used (along with $PKGCHK
)
to look for installed versions of
the Sun PRO C++ compiler.
The default is
pkginfo
.
The name of the platform used to create the Environment. If no platform is
specified when the Environment is created,
scons
autodetects the platform.
env = Environment(tools = []) if env['PLATFORM'] == 'cygwin': Tool('mingw')(env) else: Tool('msvc')(env)
The $POAUTOINIT
variable, if set to True
(on non-zero
numeric value), let the msginit
tool to automatically initialize
missing PO
files with
msginit(1). This applies to both,
POInit
and POUpdate
builders (and others that use any of
them).
Common alias for all PO
files created with POInit
builder (default: 'po-create'
).
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
Suffix used for PO
files (default: '.po'
)
See msginit
tool and POInit
builder.
The $POTDOMAIN
defines default domain, used to generate
POT
filename as
when
no $POTDOMAIN
.potPOT
file name is provided by the user. This applies to
POTUpdate
, POInit
and POUpdate
builders (and
builders, that use them, e.g. Translate
). Normally (if $POTDOMAIN
is
not defined), the builders use messages.pot
as default
POT
file name.
Suffix used for PO Template files (default: '.pot'
).
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Name of the common phony target for all PO Templates created with
POUpdate
(default: 'pot-update'
).
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Common alias for all PO
files being defined with
POUpdate
builder (default: 'po-update'
).
See msgmerge
tool and POUpdate
builder.
A Python function used to print the command lines as they are executed
(assuming command printing is not disabled by the
-q
or
-s
options or their equivalents).
The function should take four arguments:
s
,
the command being executed (a string),
target
,
the target being built (file node, list, or string name(s)),
source
,
the source(s) used (file node, list, or string name(s)), and
env
,
the environment being used.
The function must do the printing itself. The default implementation, used if this variable is not set or is None, is:
def print_cmd_line(s, target, source, env): sys.stdout.write(s + "\n")
Here's an example of a more interesting function:
def print_cmd_line(s, target, source, env): sys.stdout.write("Building %s -> %s...\n" % (' and '.join([str(x) for x in source]), ' and '.join([str(x) for x in target]))) env=Environment(PRINT_CMD_LINE_FUNC=print_cmd_line) env.Program('foo', 'foo.c')
This just prints "Building targetname
from sourcename
..." instead
of the actual commands.
Such a function could also log the actual commands to a log file,
for example.
TODO
The prefix used for executable file names.
The suffix used for executable file names.
The command line used to convert TeX DVI files into a PostScript file.
The string displayed when a TeX DVI file
is converted into a PostScript file.
If this is not set, then $PSCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The prefix used for PostScript file names.
The prefix used for PostScript file names.
Turn off scanning for mocable files. Use the Moc Builder to explicitly specify files to run moc on.
The path where the qt binaries are installed.
The default value is '$QTDIR
/bin'.
The path where the qt header files are installed.
The default value is '$QTDIR
/include'.
Note: If you set this variable to None,
the tool won't change the $CPPPATH
construction variable.
Prints lots of debugging information while scanning for moc files.
Default value is 'qt'. You may want to set this to 'qt-mt'. Note: If you set
this variable to None, the tool won't change the $LIBS
variable.
The path where the qt libraries are installed.
The default value is '$QTDIR
/lib'.
Note: If you set this variable to None,
the tool won't change the $LIBPATH
construction variable.
Default value is '$QT_BINPATH
/moc'.
Default value is ''. Prefix for moc output files, when source is a cxx file.
Default value is '.moc'. Suffix for moc output files, when source is a cxx file.
Command to generate a moc file from a cpp file.
The string displayed when generating a moc file from a cpp file.
If this is not set, then $QT_MOCFROMCXXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Default value is '-i'. These flags are passed to moc, when moccing a C++ file.
Command to generate a moc file from a header.
The string displayed when generating a moc file from a cpp file.
If this is not set, then $QT_MOCFROMHCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Default value is ''. These flags are passed to moc, when moccing a header file.
Default value is 'moc_'. Prefix for moc output files, when source is a header.
Default value is '$CXXFILESUFFIX
'. Suffix for moc output files, when source is
a header.
Default value is '$QT_BINPATH
/uic'.
Command to generate header files from .ui files.
The string displayed when generating header files from .ui files.
If this is not set, then $QT_UICCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Default value is ''. These flags are passed to uic, when creating a a h file from a .ui file.
Default value is ''. Prefix for uic generated header files.
Default value is '.h'. Suffix for uic generated header files.
Default value is ''. These flags are passed to uic, when creating a cxx file from a .ui file.
Default value is 'uic_'. Prefix for uic generated implementation files.
Default value is '$CXXFILESUFFIX
'. Suffix for uic generated implementation
files.
Default value is '.ui'. Suffix of designer input files.
The qt tool tries to take this from os.environ.
It also initializes all QT_*
construction variables listed below.
(Note that all paths are constructed
with python's os.path.join() method,
but are listed here with the '/' separator
for easier reading.)
In addition, the construction environment
variables $CPPPATH
,
$LIBPATH
and
$LIBS
may be modified
and the variables
$PROGEMITTER
, $SHLIBEMITTER
and $LIBEMITTER
are modified. Because the build-performance is affected when using this tool,
you have to explicitly specify it at Environment creation:
Environment(tools=['default','qt'])
The qt tool supports the following operations:
Automatic moc file generation from header files.
You do not have to specify moc files explicitly, the tool does it for you.
However, there are a few preconditions to do so: Your header file must have
the same filebase as your implementation file and must stay in the same
directory. It must have one of the suffixes .h, .hpp, .H, .hxx, .hh. You
can turn off automatic moc file generation by setting QT_AUTOSCAN to 0.
See also the corresponding
Moc
()
builder method.
Automatic moc file generation from cxx files.
As stated in the qt documentation, include the moc file at the end of
the cxx file. Note that you have to include the file, which is generated
by the transformation ${QT_MOCCXXPREFIX}<basename>${QT_MOCCXXSUFFIX}, by default
<basename>.moc. A warning is generated after building the moc file, if you
do not include the correct file. If you are using VariantDir, you may
need to specify duplicate=1. You can turn off automatic moc file generation
by setting QT_AUTOSCAN to 0. See also the corresponding
Moc
builder method.
Automatic handling of .ui files.
The implementation files generated from .ui files are handled much the same
as yacc or lex files. Each .ui file given as a source of Program, Library or
SharedLibrary will generate three files, the declaration file, the
implementation file and a moc file. Because there are also generated headers,
you may need to specify duplicate=1 in calls to VariantDir.
See also the corresponding
Uic
builder method.
The archive indexer.
The command line used to index a static library archive.
The string displayed when a static library archive is indexed.
If this is not set, then $RANLIBCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(RANLIBCOMSTR = "Indexing $TARGET")
General options passed to the archive indexer.
The resource compiler used to build a Microsoft Visual C++ resource file.
The command line used to build a Microsoft Visual C++ resource file.
The string displayed when invoking the resource compiler
to build a Microsoft Visual C++ resource file.
If this is not set, then $RCCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The flags passed to the resource compiler by the RES builder.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched
by the resource compiler.
The value of $RCINCFLAGS
is created
by appending $RCINCPREFIX
and $RCINCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $CPPPATH
.
The prefix (flag) used to specify an include directory
on the resource compiler command line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each directory
in the $CPPPATH
construction variable
when the $RCINCFLAGS
variable is expanded.
The suffix used to specify an include directory
on the resource compiler command line.
This will be appended to the end of each directory
in the $CPPPATH
construction variable
when the $RCINCFLAGS
variable is expanded.
A function that converts a string into a list of Dir instances by searching the repositories.
The program used on Windows systems
to register a newly-built DLL library
whenever the SharedLibrary
builder
is passed a keyword argument of register=1
.
The command line used on Windows systems
to register a newly-built DLL library
whenever the SharedLibrary
builder
is passed a keyword argument of register=1
.
The string displayed when registering a newly-built DLL file.
If this is not set, then $REGSVRCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Flags passed to the DLL registration program
on Windows systems when a newly-built DLL library is registered.
By default,
this includes the /s
that prevents dialog boxes from popping up
and requiring user attention.
The Java RMI stub compiler.
The command line used to compile stub
and skeleton class files
from Java classes that contain RMI implementations.
Any options specified in the $RMICFLAGS
construction variable
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when compiling
stub and skeleton class files
from Java classes that contain RMI implementations.
If this is not set, then $RMICCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(RMICCOMSTR = "Generating stub/skeleton class files $TARGETS from $SOURCES")
General options passed to the Java RMI stub compiler.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the rpath flags to be used when linking
a program with shared libraries.
The value of $_RPATH
is created
by appending $RPATHPREFIX
and $RPATHSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $RPATH
.
A list of paths to search for shared libraries when running programs.
Currently only used in the GNU (gnulink),
IRIX (sgilink) and Sun (sunlink) linkers.
Ignored on platforms and toolchains that don't support it.
Note that the paths added to RPATH
are not transformed by
scons
in any way: if you want an absolute
path, you must make it absolute yourself.
The prefix used to specify a directory to be searched for
shared libraries when running programs.
This will be appended to the beginning of each directory
in the $RPATH
construction variable
when the $_RPATH
variable is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify a directory to be searched for
shared libraries when running programs.
This will be appended to the end of each directory
in the $RPATH
construction variable
when the $_RPATH
variable is automatically generated.
The RPC protocol compiler.
Options passed to the RPC protocol compiler
when generating client side stubs.
These are in addition to any flags specified in the
$RPCGENFLAGS
construction variable.
General options passed to the RPC protocol compiler.
Options passed to the RPC protocol compiler
when generating a header file.
These are in addition to any flags specified in the
$RPCGENFLAGS
construction variable.
Options passed to the RPC protocol compiler
when generating server side stubs.
These are in addition to any flags specified in the
$RPCGENFLAGS
construction variable.
Options passed to the RPC protocol compiler
when generating XDR routines.
These are in addition to any flags specified in the
$RPCGENFLAGS
construction variable.
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.
The
(optional) path to the SCons library directory, initialized from the external
environment. If set, this is used to construct a shorter and more efficient
search path in the $MSVSSCONS
command line executed from Microsoft
Visual Studio project files.
The C compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
The command line used to compile a C source file
to a shared-library object file.
Any options specified in the $SHCFLAGS
,
$SHCCFLAGS
and
$CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a C source file
is compiled to a shared object file.
If this is not set, then $SHCCCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(SHCCCOMSTR = "Compiling shared object $TARGET")
Options that are passed to the C and C++ compilers to generate shared-library objects.
Options that are passed to the C compiler (only; not C++) to generate shared-library objects.
The C++ compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
The command line used to compile a C++ source file
to a shared-library object file.
Any options specified in the $SHCXXFLAGS
and
$CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a C++ source file
is compiled to a shared object file.
If this is not set, then $SHCXXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(SHCXXCOMSTR = "Compiling shared object $TARGET")
Options that are passed to the C++ compiler to generate shared-library objects.
The name of the compiler to use when compiling D source destined to be in a shared objects.
The name of the compiler to use when compiling D source destined to be in a shared objects.
The name of the compiler to use when compiling D source destined to be in a shared objects.
The command line to use when compiling code to be part of shared objects.
The command line to use when compiling code to be part of shared objects.
The command line to use when compiling code to be part of shared objects.
SHDLIBVERSION.
SHDLIBVERSIONFLAGS.
The linker to use when creating shared objects for code bases include D sources.
The linker to use when creating shared objects for code bases include D sources.
The linker to use when creating shared objects for code bases include D sources.
The command line to use when generating shared objects.
The command line to use when generating shared objects.
The command line to use when generating shared objects.
The list of flags to use when generating a shared object.
The list of flags to use when generating a shared object.
The list of flags to use when generating a shared object.
A string naming the shell program that will be passed to the
$SPAWN
function.
See the
$SPAWN
construction variable for more information.
The Fortran 03 compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $SHF03
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 03 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 03 source file
to a shared-library object file.
You only need to set $SHF03COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 03 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHF03COM
or $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran 03 compiler
to generated shared-library objects.
You only need to set $SHF03FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 03 source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $SHF03FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $SHF03PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 03 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 03 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHF03PPCOM
or $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The Fortran 08 compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $SHF08
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 08 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 08 source file
to a shared-library object file.
You only need to set $SHF08COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 08 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHF08COM
or $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran 08 compiler
to generated shared-library objects.
You only need to set $SHF08FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 08 source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $SHF08FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $SHF08PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 08 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 08 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHF08PPCOM
or $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The Fortran 77 compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $SHF77
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 77 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 77 source file
to a shared-library object file.
You only need to set $SHF77COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 77 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHF77COM
or $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran 77 compiler
to generated shared-library objects.
You only need to set $SHF77FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 77 source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $SHF77FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $SHF77PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 77 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 77 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHF77PPCOM
or $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The Fortran 90 compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $SHF90
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 90 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 90 source file
to a shared-library object file.
You only need to set $SHF90COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 90 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHF90COM
or $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran 90 compiler
to generated shared-library objects.
You only need to set $SHF90FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 90 source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $SHF90FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $SHF90PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 90 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 90 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHF90PPCOM
or $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The Fortran 95 compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRAN
variable,
which specifies the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
You only need to set $SHF95
if you need to use a specific compiler
or compiler version for Fortran 95 files.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 95 source file
to a shared-library object file.
You only need to set $SHF95COM
if you need to use a specific
command line for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANCOM
variable,
which specifies the default command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 95 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHF95COM
or $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran 95 compiler
to generated shared-library objects.
You only need to set $SHF95FLAGS
if you need to define specific
user options for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
variable,
which specifies the user-specified options
passed to the default Fortran compiler
for all Fortran versions.
The command line used to compile a Fortran 95 source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified in the $SHF95FLAGS
and $CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
You only need to set $SHF95PPCOM
if you need to use a specific
C-preprocessor command line for Fortran 95 files.
You should normally set the $SHFORTRANPPCOM
variable,
which specifies the default C-preprocessor command line
for all Fortran versions.
The string displayed when a Fortran 95 source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHF95PPCOM
or $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The default Fortran compiler used for generating shared-library objects.
The command line used to compile a Fortran source file to a shared-library object file.
The string displayed when a Fortran source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file.
If this is not set, then $SHFORTRANCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
Options that are passed to the Fortran compiler to generate shared-library objects.
The command line used to compile a Fortran source file to a
shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
Any options specified
in the $SHFORTRANFLAGS
and
$CPPFLAGS
construction variables
are included on this command line.
The string displayed when a Fortran source file
is compiled to a shared-library object file
after first running the file through the C preprocessor.
If this is not set, then $SHFORTRANPPCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
TODO
Instructs the SharedLibrary
builder to not create symlinks for versioned
shared libraries.
The prefix used for shared library file names.
A macro that automatically generates shared library's SONAME based on $TARGET,
$SHLIBVERSION and $SHLIBSUFFIX. Used by SharedLibrary
builder when
the linker tool supports SONAME (e.g. gnulink
).
The suffix used for shared library file names.
When this construction variable is defined, a versioned shared library
is created by SharedLibrary
builder. This activates the
$_SHLIBVERSIONFLAGS
and thus modifies the $SHLINKCOM
as
required, adds the version number to the library name, and creates the symlinks
that are needed. $SHLIBVERSION
versions should exist as alpha-numeric,
decimal-delimited values as defined by the regular expression "\w+[\.\w+]*".
Example $SHLIBVERSION
values include '1', '1.2.3', and '1.2.gitaa412c8b'.
Extra flags added to $SHLINKCOM
when building versioned
SharedLibrary
. These flags are only used when $SHLIBVERSION
is
set.
This macro automatically introduces extra flags to $SHLINKCOM
when
building versioned SharedLibrary
(that is when $SHLIBVERSION
is set). _SHLIBVERSIONFLAGS
usually adds $SHLIBVERSIONFLAGS
and some extra dynamically generated options (such as
-Wl,-soname=$_SHLIBSONAME
. It is unused by "plain"
(unversioned) shared libraries.
The linker for programs that use shared libraries.
The command line used to link programs using shared libraries.
The string displayed when programs using shared libraries are linked.
If this is not set, then $SHLINKCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(SHLINKCOMSTR = "Linking shared $TARGET")
General user options passed to the linker for programs using shared libraries.
Note that this variable should
not
contain
-l
(or similar) options for linking with the libraries listed in $LIBS
,
nor
-L
(or similar) include search path options
that scons generates automatically from $LIBPATH
.
See
$_LIBFLAGS
above,
for the variable that expands to library-link options,
and
$_LIBDIRFLAGS
above,
for the variable that expands to library search path options.
The prefix used for shared object file names.
The suffix used for shared object file names.
Variable used to hard-code SONAME for versioned shared library/loadable module.
env.SharedLibrary('test', 'test.c', SHLIBVERSION='0.1.2', SONAME='libtest.so.2')
The variable is used, for example, by gnulink
linker tool.
A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.)
The URL
(web address)
of the location from which the project was retrieved.
This is used to fill in the
Source:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg and RPM packages.
A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.)
A command interpreter function that will be called to execute command line strings. The function must expect the following arguments:
def spawn(shell, escape, cmd, args, env):
sh
is a string naming the shell program to use.
escape
is a function that can be called to escape shell special characters in
the command line.
cmd
is the path to the command to be executed.
args
is the arguments to the command.
env
is a dictionary of the environment variables
in which the command should be executed.
When this variable is true, static objects and shared objects are assumed to be the same; that is, SCons does not check for linking static objects into a shared library.
The dictionary used by the Substfile
or Textfile
builders
for substitution values.
It can be anything acceptable to the dict() constructor,
so in addition to a dictionary,
lists of tuples are also acceptable.
The prefix used for Substfile
file names,
the null string by default.
The suffix used for Substfile
file names,
the null string by default.
A short summary of what the project is about.
This is used to fill in the
Summary:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg and RPM packages,
and as the
Description:
field in MSI packages.
The scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
The suffix that will be used for intermediate C
source files generated by
the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
The default value is
_wrap
$CFILESUFFIX
.
By default, this value is used whenever the
-c++
option is
not
specified as part of the
$SWIGFLAGS
construction variable.
The command line used to call the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
The string displayed when calling
the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
If this is not set, then $SWIGCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
The suffix that will be used for intermediate C++
source files generated by
the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
The default value is
_wrap
$CFILESUFFIX
.
By default, this value is used whenever the
-c++
option is specified as part of the
$SWIGFLAGS
construction variable.
The suffix that will be used for intermediate C++ header
files generated by the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
These are only generated for C++ code when the SWIG 'directors' feature is
turned on.
The default value is
_wrap.h
.
General options passed to
the scripting language wrapper and interface generator.
This is where you should set
-python
,
-perl5
,
-tcl
,
or whatever other options you want to specify to SWIG.
If you set the
-c++
option in this variable,
scons
will, by default,
generate a C++ intermediate source file
with the extension that is specified as the
$CXXFILESUFFIX
variable.
An automatically-generated construction variable
containing the SWIG command-line options
for specifying directories to be searched for included files.
The value of $_SWIGINCFLAGS
is created
by appending $SWIGINCPREFIX
and $SWIGINCSUFFIX
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $SWIGPATH
.
The prefix used to specify an include directory on the SWIG command line.
This will be appended to the beginning of each directory
in the $SWIGPATH
construction variable
when the $_SWIGINCFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
The suffix used to specify an include directory on the SWIG command line.
This will be appended to the end of each directory
in the $SWIGPATH
construction variable
when the $_SWIGINCFLAGS
variable is automatically generated.
Specifies the output directory in which
the scripting language wrapper and interface generator
should place generated language-specific files.
This will be used by SCons to identify
the files that will be generated by the swig call,
and translated into the
swig -outdir
option on the command line.
The list of directories that the scripting language wrapper and interface generate will search for included files. The SWIG implicit dependency scanner will search these directories for include files. The default value is an empty list.
Don't explicitly put include directory
arguments in SWIGFLAGS;
the result will be non-portable
and the directories will not be searched by the dependency scanner.
Note: directory names in SWIGPATH will be looked-up relative to the SConscript
directory when they are used in a command.
To force
scons
to look-up a directory relative to the root of the source tree use #:
env = Environment(SWIGPATH='#/include')
The directory look-up can also be forced using the
Dir
()
function:
include = Dir('include') env = Environment(SWIGPATH=include)
The directory list will be added to command lines
through the automatically-generated
$_SWIGINCFLAGS
construction variable,
which is constructed by
appending the values of the
$SWIGINCPREFIX
and $SWIGINCSUFFIX
construction variables
to the beginning and end
of each directory in $SWIGPATH
.
Any command lines you define that need
the SWIGPATH directory list should
include $_SWIGINCFLAGS
:
env = Environment(SWIGCOM="my_swig -o $TARGET $_SWIGINCFLAGS $SOURCES")
The version number of the SWIG tool.
The tar archiver.
The command line used to call the tar archiver.
The string displayed when archiving files
using the tar archiver.
If this is not set, then $TARCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(TARCOMSTR = "Archiving $TARGET")
General options passed to the tar archiver.
A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.)
Sets the target architecture for Visual Studio compiler (i.e. the arch
of the binaries generated by the compiler). If not set, default to
$HOST_ARCH
, or, if that is unset, to the architecture of the
running machine's OS (note that the python build or architecture has no
effect).
This variable must be passed as an argument to the Environment()
constructor; setting it later has no effect.
This is currently only used on Windows, but in the future it will be
used on other OSes as well.
Valid values for Windows are
x86
,
i386
(for 32 bits);
amd64
,
emt64
,
x86_64
(for 64 bits);
and ia64
(Itanium).
For example, if you want to compile 64-bit binaries, you would set
TARGET_ARCH='x86_64'
in your SCons environment.
The name of the target hardware architecture for the compiled objects created by this Environment. This defaults to the value of HOST_ARCH, and the user can override it. Currently only set for Win32.
The name of the target operating system for the compiled objects created by this Environment. This defaults to the value of HOST_OS, and the user can override it. Currently only set for Win32.
A reserved variable name that may not be set or used in a construction environment. (See "Variable Substitution," below.)
The suffix used for tar file names.
The prefix for a temporary file used to execute lines longer than $MAXLINELENGTH. The default is '@'. This may be set for toolchains that use other values, such as '-@' for the diab compiler or '-via' for ARM toolchain.
The TeX formatter and typesetter.
The command line used to call the TeX formatter and typesetter.
The string displayed when calling
the TeX formatter and typesetter.
If this is not set, then $TEXCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(TEXCOMSTR = "Building $TARGET from TeX input $SOURCES")
General options passed to the TeX formatter and typesetter.
List of directories that the LaTeX program will search for include directories. The LaTeX implicit dependency scanner will search these directories for \include and \import files.
The prefix used for Textfile
file names,
the null string by default.
The suffix used for Textfile
file names;
.txt
by default.
A list of the names of the Tool specifications that are part of this construction environment.
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.)
The person or organization who supply the packaged software.
This is used to fill in the
Vendor:
field in the controlling information for RPM packages,
and the
Manufacturer:
field in the controlling information for MSI packages.
The version of the project, specified as a string.
A deprecated synonym for $WINDOWS_INSERT_DEF
.
A deprecated synonym for $WINDOWSDEFPREFIX
.
A deprecated synonym for $WINDOWSDEFSUFFIX
.
A deprecated synonym for $WINDOWSEXPSUFFIX
.
A deprecated synonym for $WINDOWSEXPSUFFIX
.
Set this variable to True or 1 to embed the compiler-generated manifest
(normally ${TARGET}.manifest
)
into all Windows exes and DLLs built with this environment,
as a resource during their link step.
This is done using $MT
and $MTEXECOM
and $MTSHLIBCOM
.
When this is set to true,
a library build of a Windows shared library
(.dll
file)
will also build a corresponding .def
file
at the same time,
if a .def
file
is not already listed as a build target.
The default is 0 (do not build a .def
file).
When this is set to true,
scons
will be aware of the
.manifest
files generated by Microsoft Visua C/C++ 8.
The prefix used for Windows .def
file names.
The suffix used for Windows .def
file names.
The prefix used for Windows .exp
file names.
The suffix used for Windows .exp
file names.
The prefix used for executable program .manifest
files
generated by Microsoft Visual C/C++.
The suffix used for executable program .manifest
files
generated by Microsoft Visual C/C++.
The prefix used for shared library .manifest
files
generated by Microsoft Visual C/C++.
The suffix used for shared library .manifest
files
generated by Microsoft Visual C/C++.
This is used to fill in the
Depends:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg packages.
This is used to fill in the
Description:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg packages.
The default value is
$SUMMARY\n$DESCRIPTION
This is used to fill in the
Maintainer:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg packages.
This is used to fill in the
Priority:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg packages.
This is used to fill in the
Section:
field in the controlling information for Ipkg packages.
This is used to fill in the
Language:
attribute in the controlling information for MSI packages.
The text of the software license in RTF format. Carriage return characters will be replaced with the RTF equivalent \\par.
TODO
This is used to fill in the
AutoReqProv:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
internal, but overridable
This is used to fill in the
BuildRequires:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
internal, but overridable
internal, but overridable
This is used to fill in the
Conflicts:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This value is used as the default attributes
for the files in the RPM package.
The default value is
(-,root,root)
.
This is used to fill in the
Distribution:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Epoch:
field in the controlling information for RPM packages.
This is used to fill in the
ExcludeArch:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
ExclusiveArch:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Group:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Group(lang):
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
Note that
lang
is not literal
and should be replaced by
the appropriate language code.
This is used to fill in the
Icon:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
internal, but overridable
This is used to fill in the
Packager:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
%post:
section in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
%postun:
section in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Prefix:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
%pre:
section in the RPM
.spec
file.
internal, but overridable
This is used to fill in the
%preun:
section in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Provides:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Requires:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Serial:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
This is used to fill in the
Url:
field in the RPM
.spec
file.
Path to xgettext(1) program (found via
Detect()
).
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Complete xgettext command line.
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
A string that is shown when xgettext(1) command is invoked
(default: ''
, which means "print $XGETTEXTCOM
").
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Internal "macro". Generates xgettext domain name
form source and target (default: '${TARGET.filebase}'
).
Additional flags to xgettext(1).
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Name of file containing list of xgettext(1)'s source
files. Autotools' users know this as POTFILES.in
so they
will in most cases set XGETTEXTFROM="POTFILES.in"
here.
The $XGETTEXTFROM
files have same syntax and semantics as the well known
GNU POTFILES.in
.
See xgettext
tool and POTUpdate
builder.
Internal "macro". Genrates list of -D<dir>
flags
from the $XGETTEXTPATH
list.
This flag is used to add single $XGETTEXTFROM
file to
xgettext(1)'s commandline (default:
'-f'
).
(default: ''
)
List of directories, there xgettext(1) will look for
source files (default: []
).
This variable works only together with $XGETTEXTFROM
Internal "macro". Generates list of -f<file>
flags
from $XGETTEXTFROM
.
This flag is used to add single search path to
xgettext(1)'s commandline (default:
'-D'
).
(default: ''
)
The parser generator.
The command line used to call the parser generator to generate a source file.
The string displayed when generating a source file
using the parser generator.
If this is not set, then $YACCCOM
(the command line) is displayed.
env = Environment(YACCCOMSTR = "Yacc'ing $TARGET from $SOURCES")
General options passed to the parser generator.
If $YACCFLAGS
contains a -d
option,
SCons assumes that the call will also create a .h file
(if the yacc source file ends in a .y suffix)
or a .hpp file
(if the yacc source file ends in a .yy suffix)
The suffix of the C
header file generated by the parser generator
when the
-d
option is used.
Note that setting this variable does not cause
the parser generator to generate a header
file with the specified suffix,
it exists to allow you to specify
what suffix the parser generator will use of its own accord.
The default value is
.h
.
The suffix of the C++
header file generated by the parser generator
when the
-d
option is used.
Note that setting this variable does not cause
the parser generator to generate a header
file with the specified suffix,
it exists to allow you to specify
what suffix the parser generator will use of its own accord.
The default value is
.hpp
,
except on Mac OS X,
where the default is
${TARGET.suffix}.h
.
because the default bison parser generator just
appends .h
to the name of the generated C++ file.
The suffix of the file
containing the VCG grammar automaton definition
when the
--graph=
option is used.
Note that setting this variable does not cause
the parser generator to generate a VCG
file with the specified suffix,
it exists to allow you to specify
what suffix the parser generator will use of its own accord.
The default value is
.vcg
.
The zip compression and file packaging utility.
The command line used to call the zip utility, or the internal Python function used to create a zip archive.
The
compression
flag
from the Python
zipfile
module used by the internal Python function
to control whether the zip archive
is compressed or not.
The default value is
zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED
,
which creates a compressed zip archive.
This value has no effect if the
zipfile
module is unavailable.
The string displayed when archiving files
using the zip utility.
If this is not set, then $ZIPCOM
(the command line or internal Python function) is displayed.
env = Environment(ZIPCOMSTR = "Zipping $TARGET")
General options passed to the zip utility.
An optional zip root directory (default empty). The filenames stored in the zip file will be relative to this directory, if given. Otherwise the filenames are relative to the current directory of the command. For instance:
env = Environment() env.Zip('foo.zip', 'subdir1/subdir2/file1', ZIPROOT='subdir1')
will produce a zip file foo.zip
containing a file with the name
subdir2/file1
rather than
subdir1/subdir2/file1
.
The suffix used for zip file names.