Dependencies
Introduced in Conan 1.38.
Warning
These tools are experimental and subject to breaking changes.
Note
This is an advanced feature. Most users will not need to use it, it is intended for
developing new build system integrations and similar purposes.
For defining dependencies between packages, check the requires, tool_requires and
other attributes
Conan recipes provide access to their dependencies via the self.dependencies attribute.
This attribute is extensively used by generators like CMakeDeps or MSBuildDeps to
generate the necessary files for the build.
This section documents the self.dependencies attribute, as it might be used by users
both directly in recipe or indirectly to create custom build integrations and generators.
Dependencies interface
It is possible to access each one of the individual dependencies of the current recipe, with the following syntax:
class Pkg(ConanFile):
requires = "openssl/0.1"
def generate(self):
openssl = self.dependencies["openssl"]
# access to members
openssl.ref.version
openssl.ref.revision # recipe revision
openssl.options
openssl.settings
Some important points:
All the information is read only. Any attempt to modify dependencies information is an error and can raise at any time, even if it doesn’t raise yet.
It is not possible either to call any methods or any attempt to reuse code from the dependencies via this mechanism.
This information does not exist in some recipe methods, only in those methods that evaluate after the full dependency graph has been computed. It will not exist in
configure(),config_options,export(),export_source(),set_name(),set_version(),requirements(),build_requirements(),system_requirements(),source(),init(),layout(). Any attempt to use it in these methods can raise an error at any time.At the moment, this information should only be used in
generate()andvalidate()methods. Any other use, please submit a Github issue.
Not all fields of the dependency conanfile are exposed, the current fields are:
package_folder: The folder location of the dependency package binary
ref: an object that contains
name,version,user,channelandrevision(recipe revision)pref: an object that contains
ref,package_idandrevision(package revision)buildenv_info:
Environmentobject with the information of the environment necessary to buildrunenv_info:
Environmentobject with the information of the environment necessary to run the appcpp_info: includedirs, libdirs, etc for the dependency.
settings: The actual settings values of this dependency
settings_build: The actual build settings values of this dependency
options: The actual options values of this dependency
context: The context (build, host) of this dependency
conf_info: Configuration information of this dependency, intended to be applied to consumers.
dependencies: The transitive dependencies of this dependency
is_build_context: Return
Trueifcontext == "build".
Iterating dependencies
It is possible to iterate in a dict-like fashion all dependencies of a recipe.
Take into account that self.dependencies contains all the current dependencies,
both direct and transitive. Every upstream dependency of the current one that has some
effect on it, will have an entry in this self.dependencies.
Iterating the dependencies can be done as:
requires = "zlib/1.2.11", "poco/1.9.4"
def generate(self):
for require, dependency in self.dependencies.items():
self.output.info("Dependency is direct={}: {}".format(require.direct, dependency.ref))
will output:
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=True: zlib/1.2.11
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=True: poco/1.9.4
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=False: pcre/8.44
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=False: expat/2.4.1
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=False: sqlite3/3.35.5
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=False: openssl/1.1.1k
conanfile.py (hello/0.1): Dependency is direct=False: bzip2/1.0.8
Where the require dictionary key is a “requirement”, and can contain specifiers of the relation
between the current recipe and the dependency. At the moment they can be:
require.direct: boolean,Trueif it is direct dependency orFalseif it is a transitive one.require.build: boolean,Trueif it is abuild_requirein the build context, ascmake.require.test: boolean,Trueif its abuild_requirein the host context (defined withself.test_requires()), asgtest.
The dependency dictionary value is the read-only object described above that access the dependency attributes.
The self.dependencies contains some helpers to filter based on some criteria:
self.dependencies.host: Will filter out requires withbuild=True, leaving regular dependencies likezliborpoco.self.dependencies.direct_host: Will filter out requires withbuild=Trueordirect=Falseself.dependencies.build: Will filter out requires withbuild=False, leaving onlytool_requiresin the build context, ascmake.self.dependencies.direct_build: Will filter out requires withbuild=Falseordirect=Falseself.dependencies.test: Will filter out requires withbuild=Trueor withtest=False, leaving only test requirements asgtestin the host context.
They can be used in the same way:
requires = "zlib/1.2.11", "poco/1.9.4"
def generate(self):
cmake = self.dependencies.direct_build["cmake"]
for require, dependency in self.dependencies.build.items():
# do something, only build deps here
Dependencies cpp_info interface
The cpp_info interface is heavily used by build systems to access the data.
This object defines global and per-component attributes to access information like the include
folders:
def generate(self):
cpp_info = self.dependencies["mydep"].cpp_info
cpp_info.includedirs
cpp_info.libdirs
cpp_info.components["mycomp"].includedirs
cpp_info.components["mycomp"].libdirs
These are the defined attributes in cpp_info. All the paths are typically relative paths to
the root of the package folder that contains the dependency artifacts:
# ###### DIRECTORIES
self.includedirs = None # Ordered list of include paths
self.srcdirs = None # Ordered list of source paths
self.libdirs = None # Directories to find libraries
self.resdirs = None # Directories to find resources, data, etc
self.bindirs = None # Directories to find executables and shared libs
self.builddirs = None
self.frameworkdirs = None
# ##### FIELDS
self.system_libs = None # Ordered list of system libraries
self.frameworks = None # Macos .framework
self.libs = None # The libs to link against
self.defines = None # preprocessor definitions
self.cflags = None # pure C flags
self.cxxflags = None # C++ compilation flags
self.sharedlinkflags = None # linker flags
self.exelinkflags = None # linker flags
self.objects = None # objects to link