How to package header-only libraries

Without unit tests

Packaging a header only library, without requiring to build and run unit tests for it within Conan, can be done with a very simple recipe. Assuming you have the recipe in the source repo root folder, and the headers in a subfolder called include, you could do:

from conans import ConanFile

class HelloConan(ConanFile):
    name = "Hello"
    version = "0.1"
    # No settings/options are necessary, this is header only
    exports_sources = "include/*"
    no_copy_source = True

    def package(self):
        self.copy("*.h")

If you want to package an external repository, you can use the source() method to do a clone or download instead of the exports_sources fields.

  • There is no need for settings, as changing them will not affect the final package artifacts

  • There is no need for build() method, as header-only are not built

  • There is no need for a custom package_info() method. The default one already adds an “include” subfolder to the include path

  • no_copy_source = True will disable the copy of the source folder to the build directory as there is no need to do so because source code is not modified at all by the configure() or build() methods.

  • Note that this recipe has no other dependencies, settings or options. If it had any of those, it would be very convenient to add the package_id() method, to ensure that only one package with always the same ID is created, irrespective of the configurations and dependencies:

def package_id(self):
    self.info.header_only()

Package is created with:

$ conan create . user/channel

With unit tests

If you want to run the library unit test while packaging, you would need this recipe:

from conans import ConanFile, CMake

class HelloConan(ConanFile):
    name = "Hello"
    version = "0.1"
    settings = "os", "compiler", "arch", "build_type"
    exports_sources = "include/*", "CMakeLists.txt", "example.cpp"
    no_copy_source = True

    def build(self): # this is not building a library, just tests
        cmake = CMake(self)
        cmake.configure()
        cmake.build()
        cmake.test()

    def package(self):
        self.copy("*.h")

    def package_id(self):
        self.info.header_only()

Tip

If you are cross-building your library or app you’ll probably need to skip the unit tests because your target binary cannot be executed in current building host. To do it you can use CONAN_RUN_TESTS environment variable, defined as False in profile for cross-building in the call to cmake.test() this variable will be evaluated and the tests will not run.

Which will use a CMakeLists.txt file in the root folder:

project(Package CXX)
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.12)

include_directories("include")
add_executable(example example.cpp)

enable_testing()
add_test(NAME example
        WORKING_DIRECTORY ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/bin
        COMMAND example)

and some example.cpp file, which will be our “unit test” of the library:

#include <iostream>
#include "hello.h"

int main() {
    hello();
}
  • This will use different compilers and versions, as configured by Conan settings (in command line or profiles), but will always generate just 1 output package, always with the same ID.

  • The necessary files for the unit tests, must be exports_sources too (or retrieved from source() method)

  • If the package had dependencies, via requires, it would be necessary to add the generators = "cmake" to the package recipe and adding the conanbuildinfo.cmake file to the testing CMakeLists.txt:

include(${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/conanbuildinfo.cmake)
conan_basic_setup()

add_executable(example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example ${CONAN_LIBS}) # not necessary if dependencies are also header-only

Package is created with:

$ conan create . user/channel

Note

This with/without tests is referring to running full unitary tests over the library, which is different to the test functionality that checks the integrity of the package. The above examples are describing the approaches for unit-testing the library within the recipe. In either case, it is recommended to have a test_package folder, so the conan create command checks the package once it is created. Check the packaging getting started guide