Variables¶
Some fields can contains variables that are expanded by Dune. The syntax of variables is as follows:
%{var}
or, for more complex forms that take an argument:
%{fun:arg}
In order to write a plain %{, you need to write \%{ in a
string.
Dune supports the following variables:
project_rootis the root of the current project. It is typically the root of your project, and as long as you have adune-projectfile there,project_rootis independent of the workspace configuration.workspace_rootis the root of the current workspace. Note that the value ofworkspace_rootisn’t constant and depends on whether your project is vendored or not.CCis the C compiler command line (list made of the compiler name followed by its flags) that will be used to compile foreign code. For more details about its content, please see this section.CXXis the C++ compiler command line being used in the current build context.ocaml_binis the path whereocamlclives.ocamlis theocamlbinary.ocamlcis theocamlcbinary.ocamloptis theocamloptbinary.ocaml_versionis the version of the compiler used in the current build context.ocaml_whereis the output ofocamlc -where.arch_sixtyfouristrueif using a compiler that targets a 64-bit architecture andfalseotherwise.nullis/dev/nullon Unix ornulon Windows.ext_obj,ext_asm,ext_lib,ext_dll, andext_exeare the file extensions used for various artifacts.ext_pluginis.cmxsifnatdynlinkis supported and.cmaotherwise.ocaml-config:vis for every variablevin the output ofocamlc -config. Note that Dune processes the output ofocamlc -configin order to make it a bit more stable across versions, so the exact set of variables accessible this way might not be exactly the same as what you can see in the output ofocamlc -config. In particular, variables added in new OCaml versions need to be registered in Dune before they can be used.profileis the profile selected via--profile.context_nameis the name of the context (default, or defined in the workspace file)os_typeis the type of the OS the build is targeting. This is the same asocaml-config:os_type.architectureis the type of the architecture the build is targeting. This is the same asocaml-config:architecture.modelis the type of the CPU the build is targeting. This is the same asocaml-config:model.systemis the name of the OS the build is targeting. This is the same asocaml-config:system.ignoring_promoted_ruleistrueif--ignore-promoted-ruleswas passed on the command line andfalseotherwise.<ext>:<path>where<ext>is one ofcmo,cmi,cma,cmx, orcmxa. See Variables for Artifacts.env:<var>=<defaultexpands to the value of the environment variable<var>, or<default>if it does not exist. For example,%{env:BIN=/usr/bin}. Available since Dune 1.4.0.There are some Coq-specific variables detailed in Coq-Specific Variables.
In addition, (action ...) fields support the following special variables:
targetexpands to the one target.targetsexpands to the list of target.depsexpands to the list of dependencies.^expands to the list of dependencies, separated by spaces.dep:<path>expands to<path>(and adds<path>as a dependency of the action).exe:<path>is the same as<path>, except when cross-compiling, in which case it will expand to<path>from the host build context.bin:<program>expands<path>toprogram. Ifprogramis installed by a workspace package (see install stanzas), the locally built binary will be used, otherwise it will be searched in the<path>of the current build context. Note that(run %{bin:program} ...)and(run program ...)behave in the same way.%{bin:...}is only necessary when you are using(bash ...)or(system ...).bin-available:<program>expands totrueorfalse, depending on whether<program>is available or not.lib:<public-library-name>:<file>expands to the file’s installation path<file>in the library<public-library-name>. If<public-library-name>is available in the current workspace, the local file will be used, otherwise the one from the installed world will be used.lib-private:<library-name>:<file>expands to the file’s build path<file>in the library<library-name>. Both public and private library names are allowed as long as they refer to libraries within the same project.libexec:<public-library-name>:<file>is the same aslib:..., except when cross-compiling, in which case it will expand to the file from the host build context.libexec-private:<library-name>:<file>is the same aslib-private:...except when cross-compiling, in which case it will expand to the file from the host build context.lib-available:<library-name>expands totrueorfalsedepending on whether the library is available or not. A library is available if at least one of the following conditions holds:It’s part the installed world.
It’s available locally and is not optional.
It’s available locally, and all its library dependencies are available.
version:<package>expands to the version of the given package. Packages defined in the current scope have priority over the public packages. Public packages that don’t install any libraries will not be detected. How Dune determines the version of a package is described here.read:<path>expands to the contents of the given file.read-lines:<path>expands to the list of lines in the given file.read-strings:<path>expands to the list of lines in the given file, unescaped using OCaml lexical convention.
The %{<kind>:...} forms are what allows you to write custom rules that work
transparently, whether things are installed or not.
Note that aliases are ignored by %{deps}
The intent of this last form is to reliably read a list of strings generated by an OCaml program via:
List.iter (fun s -> print_string (String.escaped s)) l
Dealing with circular dependencies introduced by variables
If you ever see Dune reporting a dependency cycle that involves a variable such as %{read:<path>}, try to move <path> to a different directory.
The reason you might see such dependency cycle is because Dune is trying to evaluate the %{read:<path>} too early. For instance, let’s consider the following example:
(rule
(targets x)
(enabled_if %{read:y})
(action ...))
(rule
(with-stdout-to y (...)))
When Dune loads and interprets this file, it decides whether the
first rule is enabled by evaluating %{read:y}. To
evaluate %{read:y}, it must build y. To build y, it must
figure out the build rule that produces y, and in order to do that, it must
first load and evaluate the above dune file. You can see how this
creates a cycle.
Some cycles might be more complex. In any case, when you see such an
error, the easiest thing to do is move the file that’s being read
to a different directory, preferably a standalone one. You can use the
subdir stanza to keep the logic self-contained in the same
dune file:
(rule
(targets x)
(enabled_if %{read:dir-for-y/y})
(action ...))
(subdir
dir-for-y
(rule
(with-stdout-to y (...))))
Expansion of Lists¶
Forms that expand to a list of items, such as %{cc}, %{deps},
%{targets}, or %{read-lines:...}, are suitable to be used in
(run <prog> <arguments>). For instance in:
(run foo %{deps})
If there are two dependencies, a and b, the produced command
will be equivalent to the shell command:
$ foo "a" "b"
If you want both dependencies to be passed as a single argument, you must quote the variable:
(run foo "%{deps}")
which is equivalent to the following shell command:
$ foo "a b"
(The items of the list are concatenated with space.)
Please note: since %{deps} is a list of items, the first one may be
used as a program name. For instance:
(rule
(targets result.txt)
(deps foo.exe (glob_files *.txt))
(action (run %{deps})))
Here is another example:
(rule
(target foo.exe)
(deps foo.c)
(action (run %{cc} -o %{target} %{deps} -lfoolib)))