Tools used at build time by other ports to generate code or implement a custom build system can be packaged inside vcpkg.
When consuming a port as a tool, you must set the dependency's "host"
field to true. For example:
{
"name": "contoso-http-library",
"version-string": "1.0.0",
"description": "Contoso's http runtime library",
"dependencies": [
"contoso-core-library",
{
"name": "contoso-code-generator",
"host": true
},
{
"name": "contoso-build-system",
"host": true
}
]
}
In this case, the contoso-code-generator
and contoso-build-system
(including any transitive dependencies) will be built and installed for the host triplet before contoso-http-library
is built.
Note: Consumers must use
vcpkg.json
instead ofCONTROL
as their metadata format. You can easily convert an existingCONTROL
file usingvcpkg format-manifest /path/to/CONTROL
.
Then, within the portfile of the consumer (contoso-http-library
in the example), the CMake variable CURRENT_HOST_INSTALLED_DIR
will be defined to installed/<host-triplet>
and should be used to locate any required assets. In the example, contoso-code-generator
might have installed tools/contoso-code-generator/ccg.exe
which the consumer would add to its local path via
# ports/contoso-http-library/portfile.cmake
vcpkg_add_to_path(${CURRENT_HOST_INSTALLED_DIR}/tools/contoso-code-generator)
The default host triplets are chosen based on the host architecture and operating system, for example x64-windows
, x64-linux
, or x64-osx
. They can be overridden via:
- In CMake-based manifest mode, calling
set(VCPKG_HOST_TRIPLET "<triplet>" CACHE STRING "")
before the firstproject()
directive - In MSBuild-based manifest mode, setting the
VcpkgHostTriplet
property - On the command line, via the flag
--host-triplet=...
- The
VCPKG_DEFAULT_HOST_TRIPLET
environment variable
Producing a tool has no special requirements; tools should be authored as a standard port, following all the normal policies and practices. Notably, they should build against TARGET_TRIPLET
, not HOST_TRIPLET
within the context of their portfile.
Sometimes, it can be useful to determine whether the current context is a cross-compiling one or not. This should be done by comparing the strings TARGET_TRIPLET
and HOST_TRIPLET
. For example:
string(COMPARE EQUAL "${TARGET_TRIPLET}" "${HOST_TRIPLET}" I_AM_NOT_CROSSCOMPILING)
if(TARGET_TRIPLET STREQUAL HOST_TRIPLET)
# This is a native build
else()
# This is a cross build
endif()
Some ports are host-only: script ports and tool ports are common examples.
In this case, you can use the "native"
supports expression to describe this.
This supports expression is true when TARGET_TRIPLET == HOST_TRIPLET
.