conan install

$ conan install -h
usage: conan install [-h] [-v [V]] [-cc CORE_CONF] [-f FORMAT] [--name NAME]
                     [--version VERSION] [--user USER] [--channel CHANNEL]
                     [--requires REQUIRES] [--tool-requires TOOL_REQUIRES]
                     [-b BUILD] [-r REMOTE | -nr] [-u [UPDATE]] [-pr PROFILE]
                     [-pr:b PROFILE_BUILD] [-pr:h PROFILE_HOST]
                     [-pr:a PROFILE_ALL] [-o OPTIONS] [-o:b OPTIONS_BUILD]
                     [-o:h OPTIONS_HOST] [-o:a OPTIONS_ALL] [-s SETTINGS]
                     [-s:b SETTINGS_BUILD] [-s:h SETTINGS_HOST]
                     [-s:a SETTINGS_ALL] [-c CONF] [-c:b CONF_BUILD]
                     [-c:h CONF_HOST] [-c:a CONF_ALL] [-l LOCKFILE]
                     [--lockfile-partial] [--lockfile-out LOCKFILE_OUT]
                     [--lockfile-clean]
                     [--lockfile-overrides LOCKFILE_OVERRIDES] [-g GENERATOR]
                     [-of OUTPUT_FOLDER] [-d DEPLOYER]
                     [--deployer-folder DEPLOYER_FOLDER]
                     [--deployer-package DEPLOYER_PACKAGE] [--build-require]
                     [--envs-generation {false}]
                     [path]

Install the requirements specified in a recipe (conanfile.py or conanfile.txt).

It can also be used to install packages without a conanfile, using the
--requires and --tool-requires arguments.

If any requirement is not found in the local cache, it will iterate the remotes
looking for it. When the full dependency graph is computed, and all dependencies
recipes have been found, it will look for binary packages matching the current settings.
If no binary package is found for some or several dependencies, it will error,
unless the '--build' argument is used to build it from source.

After installation of packages, the generators and deployers will be called.

positional arguments:
  path                  Path to a folder containing a recipe (conanfile.py or
                        conanfile.txt) or to a recipe file. e.g.,
                        ./my_project/conanfile.txt.

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v [V]                Level of detail of the output. Valid options from less
                        verbose to more verbose: -vquiet, -verror, -vwarning,
                        -vnotice, -vstatus, -v or -vverbose, -vv or -vdebug,
                        -vvv or -vtrace
  -cc CORE_CONF, --core-conf CORE_CONF
                        Define core configuration, overwriting global.conf
                        values. E.g.: -cc core:non_interactive=True
  -f FORMAT, --format FORMAT
                        Select the output format: json
  --name NAME           Provide a package name if not specified in conanfile
  --version VERSION     Provide a package version if not specified in
                        conanfile
  --user USER           Provide a user if not specified in conanfile
  --channel CHANNEL     Provide a channel if not specified in conanfile
  --requires REQUIRES   Directly provide requires instead of a conanfile
  --tool-requires TOOL_REQUIRES
                        Directly provide tool-requires instead of a conanfile
  -b BUILD, --build BUILD
                        Optional, specify which packages to build from source.
                        Combining multiple '--build' options on one command
                        line is allowed. Possible values: --build="*" Force
                        build from source for all packages. --build=never
                        Disallow build for all packages, use binary packages
                        or fail if a binary package is not found, it cannot be
                        combined with other '--build' options. --build=missing
                        Build packages from source whose binary package is not
                        found. --build=cascade Build packages from source that
                        have at least one dependency being built from source.
                        --build=[pattern] Build packages from source whose
                        package reference matches the pattern. The pattern
                        uses 'fnmatch' style wildcards. --build=~[pattern]
                        Excluded packages, which will not be built from the
                        source, whose package reference matches the pattern.
                        The pattern uses 'fnmatch' style wildcards.
                        --build=missing:[pattern] Build from source if a
                        compatible binary does not exist, only for packages
                        matching pattern.
  -r REMOTE, --remote REMOTE
                        Look in the specified remote or remotes server
  -nr, --no-remote      Do not use remote, resolve exclusively in the cache
  -u [UPDATE], --update [UPDATE]
                        Will install newer versions and/or revisions in the
                        local cache for the given reference name, or all
                        references in the graph if no argument is supplied.
                        When using version ranges, it will install the latest
                        version that satisfies the range. It will update to
                        the latest revision for the resolved version range.
  -pr PROFILE, --profile PROFILE
                        Apply the specified profile. By default, or if
                        specifying -pr:h (--profile:host), it applies to the
                        host context. Use -pr:b (--profile:build) to specify
                        the build context, or -pr:a (--profile:all) to specify
                        both contexts at once
  -pr:b PROFILE_BUILD, --profile:build PROFILE_BUILD
  -pr:h PROFILE_HOST, --profile:host PROFILE_HOST
  -pr:a PROFILE_ALL, --profile:all PROFILE_ALL
  -o OPTIONS, --options OPTIONS
                        Apply the specified options. By default, or if
                        specifying -o:h (--options:host), it applies to the
                        host context. Use -o:b (--options:build) to specify
                        the build context, or -o:a (--options:all) to specify
                        both contexts at once. Example:
                        -o="pkg/*:with_qt=True"
  -o:b OPTIONS_BUILD, --options:build OPTIONS_BUILD
  -o:h OPTIONS_HOST, --options:host OPTIONS_HOST
  -o:a OPTIONS_ALL, --options:all OPTIONS_ALL
  -s SETTINGS, --settings SETTINGS
                        Apply the specified settings. By default, or if
                        specifying -s:h (--settings:host), it applies to the
                        host context. Use -s:b (--settings:build) to specify
                        the build context, or -s:a (--settings:all) to specify
                        both contexts at once. Example: -s="compiler=gcc"
  -s:b SETTINGS_BUILD, --settings:build SETTINGS_BUILD
  -s:h SETTINGS_HOST, --settings:host SETTINGS_HOST
  -s:a SETTINGS_ALL, --settings:all SETTINGS_ALL
  -c CONF, --conf CONF  Apply the specified conf. By default, or if specifying
                        -c:h (--conf:host), it applies to the host context.
                        Use -c:b (--conf:build) to specify the build context,
                        or -c:a (--conf:all) to specify both contexts at once.
                        Example:
                        -c="tools.cmake.cmaketoolchain:generator=Xcode"
  -c:b CONF_BUILD, --conf:build CONF_BUILD
  -c:h CONF_HOST, --conf:host CONF_HOST
  -c:a CONF_ALL, --conf:all CONF_ALL
  -l LOCKFILE, --lockfile LOCKFILE
                        Path to a lockfile. Use --lockfile="" to avoid
                        automatic use of existing 'conan.lock' file
  --lockfile-partial    Do not raise an error if some dependency is not found
                        in lockfile
  --lockfile-out LOCKFILE_OUT
                        Filename of the updated lockfile
  --lockfile-clean      Remove unused entries from the lockfile
  --lockfile-overrides LOCKFILE_OVERRIDES
                        Overwrite lockfile overrides
  -g GENERATOR, --generator GENERATOR
                        Generators to use
  -of OUTPUT_FOLDER, --output-folder OUTPUT_FOLDER
                        The root output folder for generated and build files
  -d DEPLOYER, --deployer DEPLOYER
                        Deploy using the provided deployer to the output
                        folder. Built-in deployers: 'full_deploy',
                        'direct_deploy', 'runtime_deploy'
  --deployer-folder DEPLOYER_FOLDER
                        Deployer output folder, base build folder by default
                        if not set
  --deployer-package DEPLOYER_PACKAGE
                        Execute the deploy() method of the packages matching
                        the provided patterns
  --build-require       Whether the provided path is a build-require
  --envs-generation {false}
                        Generation strategy for virtual environment files for
                        the root

The conan install command is one of the main Conan commands, and it is used to resolve and install dependencies.

This command does the following:

  • Compute the whole dependency graph, for the current configuration defined by settings, options, profiles and configuration. It resolves version ranges, transitive dependencies, conditional requirements, etc, to build the dependency graph.

  • Evaluate the existence of binaries for every package in the graph, whether or not there are precompiled binaries to download, or if they should be built from sources (as directed by the --build argument). If binaries are missing, it will not recompute the dependency graph to try to fallback to previous versions that contain binaries for that configuration. If a certain dependency version is desired, it should be explicitly required.

  • Download precompiled binaries, or build binaries from sources in the local cache, in the right order for the dependency graph.

  • Create the necessary files as requested by the “generators”, so build systems and other tools can locate the locally installed dependencies

  • Optionally, execute the desired deployers.

See also

Conanfile path or –requires

The conan install command can use 2 different origins for information. The first one is using a local conanfile.py or conanfile.txt, containing definitions of the dependencies and generators to be used.

$ conan install .  # there is a conanfile.txt or a conanfile.py in the cwd
$ conan install conanfile.py  # also works, direct reference file
$ conan install myconan.txt  # explicit custom name
$ conan install myfolder  # there is a conanfile in "myfolder" folder

Even if it is possible to use a custom name, in the general case, it is recommended to use the default conanfile.py name, located in the repository root, so users can do a straightforward git clone ... `` + ``conan install .

The other possibility is to not have a conanfile at all, and define the requirements to be installed directly in the command line:

# Install the zlib/1.2.13 library
$ conan install --requires=zlib/1.2.13
# Install the zlib/1.2.13 and bzip2/1.0.8 libraries
$ conan install --requires=zlib/1.2.13 --requires=bzip2/1.0.8
# Install the cmake/3.23.5 and ninja/1.11.0 tools
$ conan install --tool-requires=cmake/3.23.5 --tool-requires=ninja/1.11.0
# Install the zlib/1.2.13 library and ninja/1.11.0 tool
$ conan install --requires=zlib/1.2.13 --tool-requires=ninja/1.11.0

In the general case, it is recommended to use a conanfile instead of defining things in the command line.

Profiles, Settings, Options, Conf

There are several arguments that are used to define the effective profiles that will be used, both for the “build” and “host” contexts.

By default the arguments refer to the “host” context, so --settings:host, -s:h is totally equivalent to --settings, -s. Also, by default, the conan install command will use the default profile both for the “build” and “host” context. That means that if a profile with the “default” name has not been created, it will error.

Multiple definitions of profiles can be passed as arguments, and they will compound from left to right (right has the highest priority)

# The values of myprofile3 will have higher priority
$ conan install . -pr=myprofile1 -pr=myprofile2 -pr=myprofile3

If values for any of settings, options and conf are provided in the command line, they create a profile that is composed with the other provided -pr (or the “default” one if not specified) profiles, with higher priority, not matter what the order of arguments is.

# the final "host" profile will always be build_type=Debug, even if "myprofile"
# says "build_type=Release"
$ conan install . -pr=myprofile -s build_type=Debug

Generators and deployers

The -g argument allows to define in the command line the different built-in generators to be used:

$ conan install --requires=zlib/1.2.13 -g CMakeDeps -g CMakeToolchain

Note that in the general case, the recommended approach is to have the generators defined in the conanfile, and only for the --requires use case, it would be more necessary as command line argument.

Generators are intended to create files for the build systems to locate the dependencies, while the deployers main use case is to copy files from the Conan cache to user space, and performing any other custom operations over the dependency graph, like collecting licenses, generating reports, deploying binaries to the system, etc. The syntax for deployers is:

# does a full copy of the dependencies binaries to the current user folder
$ conan install . --deployer=full_deploy

There are 3 built-in deployers:

  • full_deploy does a complete copy of the dependencies binaries in the local folder, with a minimal folder structure to avoid conflicts between files and artifacts of different packages

  • direct_deploy does a copy of only the immediate direct dependencies, but does not include the transitive dependencies.

  • runtime_deploy deploys all the shared libraries and the executables of the dependencies (like .so, .dll, or .dylib files) into a flat directory structure. (Available since Conan 2.5.0)

Some generators might have the capability of redefining the target “package folder”. That means that if some other generator like CMakeDeps is used that is pointing to the packages, it will be pointing to the local deployed copy, and not to the original packages in the Conan cache. See the full example in Creating a Conan-agnostic deploy of dependencies for developer use.

It is also possible, and it is a powerful extension point, to write custom user deployers. Read more about custom deployers in Deployers.

It is possible to also invoke the package recipes deploy() method with the --deployer-package:

# Execute deploy() method of every recipe that defines it
$ conan install --requires=pkg/0.1 --deployer-package=*
# Execute deploy() method only for "pkg" (any version) recipes
$ conan install --requires=pkg/0.1 --deployer-package=pkg/*

The --deployer-package argument is a pattern and accept multiple values, all package references matching any of the defined patterns will execute its deploy() method. The --deployer-folder argument will also affect the output location of this deployment. See the deploy() method.

If multiple deployed packages deploy to the same location, it is their responsibility to not mutually overwrite their binaries if they have the same filenames. For example if multiple packages deploy() a file called “License.txt”, each recipe is responsible for creating an intermediate folder with the package name and/or version that makes it unique, so other recipes deploy() method do not overwrite previously deployed “License.txt” files.

Name, version, user, channel

The conan install command provides optional arguments for --name, --version, --user, --channel. These arguments might not be necessary in the majority of cases. Never for conanfile.txt and for conanfile.py only in the case that they are not defined in the recipe:

from conan import ConanFile
from conan.tools.scm import Version

class Pkg(ConanFile):
    name = "mypkg"

    def requirements(self):
        if Version(self.version) >= "3.23":
            self.requires("...")
# If we don't specify ``--version``, it will be None and it will fail
$ conan install . --version=3.24

Lockfiles

The conan install command has several arguments to load and produce lockfiles. By default, if a conan.lock file is located beside the recipe or in the current working directory if no path is provided, will be used as an input lockfile.

Lockfiles are strict by default, that means that if there is some requires and it cannot find a matching locked reference in the lockfile, it will error and stop. For cases where it is expected that the lockfile will not be complete, as there might be new dependencies, the --lockfile-partial argument can be used.

By default, conan install will not generate an output lockfile, but if the --lockfile-out argument is provided, pointing to a filename, like --lockfile-out=result.lock, then a lockfile will be generated from the current dependency graph. If --lockfile-clean argument is provided, all versions and revisions not used in the current dependency graph will be dropped from the resulting lockfile.

Let’s say that we already have a conan.lock input lockfile, but we just added a new requires = "newpkg/1.0" to a new dependency. We could resolve the dependencies, locking all the previously locked versions, while allowing to resolve the new one, which was not previously present in the lockfile, and store it in a new location, or overwrite the existing lockfile:

# --lockfile=conan.lock is the default, not necessary
$ conan install . --lockfile=conan.lock --lockfile-partial --lockfile-out=conan.lock

Also, it is likely that the majority of lockfile operations are better managed by the conan lock command.

See also

Update

The conan install command has an --update argument that will force the re-evaluation of the selected items of the dependency graph, allowing for the update of the dependencies to the latest version if using version ranges, or to the latest revision of the same version, when those versions are not locked in the given lockfile. Passing --update will check every package in the dependency graph, but it is also possible to pass a package name to the --update argument (it can be added to the command more than once with different names), to only update those packages, which avoids the re-evaluation of the whole graph.

$ conan install . --update  # Update all packages in the graph
$ conan install . --update=openssl  # Update only the openssl package
$ conan install . --update=openssl --update=boost  # Update both openssl and boost packages

Note that the --update argument will look into all the remotes specified in the command for possible newer versions, and won’t stop at the first newer one found.