1The Ninja build system 2====================== 3v1.11.0, Nov 2020 4 5 6Introduction 7------------ 8 9Ninja is yet another build system. It takes as input the 10interdependencies of files (typically source code and output 11executables) and orchestrates building them, _quickly_. 12 13Ninja joins a sea of other build systems. Its distinguishing goal is 14to be fast. It is born from 15http://neugierig.org/software/chromium/notes/2011/02/ninja.html[my 16work on the Chromium browser project], which has over 30,000 source 17files and whose other build systems (including one built from custom 18non-recursive Makefiles) would take ten seconds to start building 19after changing one file. Ninja is under a second. 20 21Philosophical overview 22~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 23 24Where other build systems are high-level languages, Ninja aims to be 25an assembler. 26 27Build systems get slow when they need to make decisions. When you are 28in a edit-compile cycle you want it to be as fast as possible -- you 29want the build system to do the minimum work necessary to figure out 30what needs to be built immediately. 31 32Ninja contains the barest functionality necessary to describe 33arbitrary dependency graphs. Its lack of syntax makes it impossible 34to express complex decisions. 35 36Instead, Ninja is intended to be used with a separate program 37generating its input files. The generator program (like the 38`./configure` found in autotools projects) can analyze system 39dependencies and make as many decisions as possible up front so that 40incremental builds stay fast. Going beyond autotools, even build-time 41decisions like "which compiler flags should I use?" or "should I 42build a debug or release-mode binary?" belong in the `.ninja` file 43generator. 44 45Design goals 46~~~~~~~~~~~~ 47 48Here are the design goals of Ninja: 49 50* very fast (i.e., instant) incremental builds, even for very large 51 projects. 52 53* very little policy about how code is built. Different projects and 54 higher-level build systems have different opinions about how code 55 should be built; for example, should built objects live alongside 56 the sources or should all build output go into a separate directory? 57 Is there a "package" rule that builds a distributable package of 58 the project? Sidestep these decisions by trying to allow either to 59 be implemented, rather than choosing, even if that results in 60 more verbosity. 61 62* get dependencies correct, and in particular situations that are 63 difficult to get right with Makefiles (e.g. outputs need an implicit 64 dependency on the command line used to generate them; to build C 65 source code you need to use gcc's `-M` flags for header 66 dependencies). 67 68* when convenience and speed are in conflict, prefer speed. 69 70Some explicit _non-goals_: 71 72* convenient syntax for writing build files by hand. _You should 73 generate your ninja files using another program_. This is how we 74 can sidestep many policy decisions. 75 76* built-in rules. _Out of the box, Ninja has no rules for 77 e.g. compiling C code._ 78 79* build-time customization of the build. _Options belong in 80 the program that generates the ninja files_. 81 82* build-time decision-making ability such as conditionals or search 83 paths. _Making decisions is slow._ 84 85To restate, Ninja is faster than other build systems because it is 86painfully simple. You must tell Ninja exactly what to do when you 87create your project's `.ninja` files. 88 89Comparison to Make 90~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 91 92Ninja is closest in spirit and functionality to Make, relying on 93simple dependencies between file timestamps. 94 95But fundamentally, make has a lot of _features_: suffix rules, 96functions, built-in rules that e.g. search for RCS files when building 97source. Make's language was designed to be written by humans. Many 98projects find make alone adequate for their build problems. 99 100In contrast, Ninja has almost no features; just those necessary to get 101builds correct while punting most complexity to generation of the 102ninja input files. Ninja by itself is unlikely to be useful for most 103projects. 104 105Here are some of the features Ninja adds to Make. (These sorts of 106features can often be implemented using more complicated Makefiles, 107but they are not part of make itself.) 108 109* Ninja has special support for discovering extra dependencies at build 110 time, making it easy to get <<ref_headers,header dependencies>> 111 correct for C/C++ code. 112 113* A build edge may have multiple outputs. 114 115* Outputs implicitly depend on the command line that was used to generate 116 them, which means that changing e.g. compilation flags will cause 117 the outputs to rebuild. 118 119* Output directories are always implicitly created before running the 120 command that relies on them. 121 122* Rules can provide shorter descriptions of the command being run, so 123 you can print e.g. `CC foo.o` instead of a long command line while 124 building. 125 126* Builds are always run in parallel, based by default on the number of 127 CPUs your system has. Underspecified build dependencies will result 128 in incorrect builds. 129 130* Command output is always buffered. This means commands running in 131 parallel don't interleave their output, and when a command fails we 132 can print its failure output next to the full command line that 133 produced the failure. 134 135 136Using Ninja for your project 137---------------------------- 138 139Ninja currently works on Unix-like systems and Windows. It's seen the 140most testing on Linux (and has the best performance there) but it runs 141fine on Mac OS X and FreeBSD. 142 143If your project is small, Ninja's speed impact is likely unnoticeable. 144(However, even for small projects it sometimes turns out that Ninja's 145limited syntax forces simpler build rules that result in faster 146builds.) Another way to say this is that if you're happy with the 147edit-compile cycle time of your project already then Ninja won't help. 148 149There are many other build systems that are more user-friendly or 150featureful than Ninja itself. For some recommendations: the Ninja 151author found http://gittup.org/tup/[the tup build system] influential 152in Ninja's design, and thinks https://github.com/apenwarr/redo[redo]'s 153design is quite clever. 154 155Ninja's benefit comes from using it in conjunction with a smarter 156meta-build system. 157 158https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/[gn]:: The meta-build system used to 159generate build files for Google Chrome and related projects (v8, 160node.js), as well as Google Fuchsia. gn can generate Ninja files for 161all platforms supported by Chrome. 162 163https://cmake.org/[CMake]:: A widely used meta-build system that 164can generate Ninja files on Linux as of CMake version 2.8.8. Newer versions 165of CMake support generating Ninja files on Windows and Mac OS X too. 166 167https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/wiki/List-of-generators-producing-ninja-build-files[others]:: Ninja ought to fit perfectly into other meta-build software 168like https://premake.github.io/[premake]. If you do this work, 169please let us know! 170 171Running Ninja 172~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 173 174Run `ninja`. By default, it looks for a file named `build.ninja` in 175the current directory and builds all out-of-date targets. You can 176specify which targets (files) to build as command line arguments. 177 178There is also a special syntax `target^` for specifying a target 179as the first output of some rule containing the source you put in 180the command line, if one exists. For example, if you specify target as 181`foo.c^` then `foo.o` will get built (assuming you have those targets 182in your build files). 183 184`ninja -h` prints help output. Many of Ninja's flags intentionally 185match those of Make; e.g `ninja -C build -j 20` changes into the 186`build` directory and runs 20 build commands in parallel. (Note that 187Ninja defaults to running commands in parallel anyway, so typically 188you don't need to pass `-j`.) 189 190 191Environment variables 192~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 193 194Ninja supports one environment variable to control its behavior: 195`NINJA_STATUS`, the progress status printed before the rule being run. 196 197Several placeholders are available: 198 199`%s`:: The number of started edges. 200`%t`:: The total number of edges that must be run to complete the build. 201`%p`:: The percentage of started edges. 202`%r`:: The number of currently running edges. 203`%u`:: The number of remaining edges to start. 204`%f`:: The number of finished edges. 205`%o`:: Overall rate of finished edges per second 206`%c`:: Current rate of finished edges per second (average over builds 207specified by `-j` or its default) 208`%e`:: Elapsed time in seconds. _(Available since Ninja 1.2.)_ 209`%%`:: A plain `%` character. 210 211The default progress status is `"[%f/%t] "` (note the trailing space 212to separate from the build rule). Another example of possible progress status 213could be `"[%u/%r/%f] "`. 214 215Extra tools 216~~~~~~~~~~~ 217 218The `-t` flag on the Ninja command line runs some tools that we have 219found useful during Ninja's development. The current tools are: 220 221[horizontal] 222`query`:: dump the inputs and outputs of a given target. 223 224`browse`:: browse the dependency graph in a web browser. Clicking a 225file focuses the view on that file, showing inputs and outputs. This 226feature requires a Python installation. By default port 8000 is used 227and a web browser will be opened. This can be changed as follows: 228+ 229---- 230ninja -t browse --port=8000 --no-browser mytarget 231---- 232+ 233`graph`:: output a file in the syntax used by `graphviz`, a automatic 234graph layout tool. Use it like: 235+ 236---- 237ninja -t graph mytarget | dot -Tpng -ograph.png 238---- 239+ 240In the Ninja source tree, `ninja graph.png` 241generates an image for Ninja itself. If no target is given generate a 242graph for all root targets. 243 244`targets`:: output a list of targets either by rule or by depth. If used 245like +ninja -t targets rule _name_+ it prints the list of targets 246using the given rule to be built. If no rule is given, it prints the source 247files (the leaves of the graph). If used like 248+ninja -t targets depth _digit_+ it 249prints the list of targets in a depth-first manner starting by the root 250targets (the ones with no outputs). Indentation is used to mark dependencies. 251If the depth is zero it prints all targets. If no arguments are provided 252+ninja -t targets depth 1+ is assumed. In this mode targets may be listed 253several times. If used like this +ninja -t targets all+ it 254prints all the targets available without indentation and it is faster 255than the _depth_ mode. 256 257`commands`:: given a list of targets, print a list of commands which, if 258executed in order, may be used to rebuild those targets, assuming that all 259output files are out of date. 260 261`inputs`:: given a list of targets, print a list of all inputs used to 262rebuild those targets. 263_Available since Ninja 1.11._ 264 265`clean`:: remove built files. By default it removes all built files 266except for those created by the generator. Adding the `-g` flag also 267removes built files created by the generator (see <<ref_rule,the rule 268reference for the +generator+ attribute>>). Additional arguments are 269targets, which removes the given targets and recursively all files 270built for them. 271+ 272If used like +ninja -t clean -r _rules_+ it removes all files built using 273the given rules. 274+ 275Files created but not referenced in the graph are not removed. This 276tool takes in account the +-v+ and the +-n+ options (note that +-n+ 277implies +-v+). 278 279`cleandead`:: remove files produced by previous builds that are no longer in the 280build file. _Available since Ninja 1.10._ 281 282`compdb`:: given a list of rules, each of which is expected to be a 283C family language compiler rule whose first input is the name of the 284source file, prints on standard output a compilation database in the 285http://clang.llvm.org/docs/JSONCompilationDatabase.html[JSON format] expected 286by the Clang tooling interface. 287_Available since Ninja 1.2._ 288 289`deps`:: show all dependencies stored in the `.ninja_deps` file. When given a 290target, show just the target's dependencies. _Available since Ninja 1.4._ 291 292`missingdeps`:: given a list of targets, look for targets that depend on 293a generated file, but do not have a properly (possibly transitive) dependency 294on the generator. Such targets may cause build flakiness on clean builds. 295+ 296The broken targets can be found assuming deps log / depfile dependency 297information is correct. Any target that depends on a generated file (output 298of a generator-target) implicitly, but does not have an explicit or order-only 299dependency path to the generator-target, is considered broken. 300+ 301The tool's findings can be verified by trying to build the listed targets in 302a clean outdir without building any other targets. The build should fail for 303each of them with a missing include error or equivalent pointing to the 304generated file. 305_Available since Ninja 1.11._ 306 307`recompact`:: recompact the `.ninja_deps` file. _Available since Ninja 1.4._ 308 309`restat`:: updates all recorded file modification timestamps in the `.ninja_log` 310file. _Available since Ninja 1.10._ 311 312`rules`:: output the list of all rules. It can be used to know which rule name 313to pass to +ninja -t targets rule _name_+ or +ninja -t compdb+. Adding the `-d` 314flag also prints the description of the rules. 315 316`msvc`:: Available on Windows hosts only. 317Helper tool to invoke the `cl.exe` compiler with a pre-defined set of 318environment variables, as in: 319+ 320---- 321ninja -t msvc -e ENVFILE -- cl.exe <arguments> 322---- 323+ 324Where `ENVFILE` is a binary file that contains an environment block suitable 325for CreateProcessA() on Windows (i.e. a series of zero-terminated strings that 326look like NAME=VALUE, followed by an extra zero terminator). Note that this uses 327the local codepage encoding. 328 329This tool also supports a deprecated way of parsing the compiler's output when 330the `/showIncludes` flag is used, and generating a GCC-compatible depfile from it. 331+ 332--- 333ninja -t msvc -o DEPFILE [-p STRING] -- cl.exe /showIncludes <arguments> 334--- 335+ 336 337When using this option, `-p STRING` can be used to pass the localized line prefix 338that `cl.exe` uses to output dependency information. For English-speaking regions 339this is `"Note: including file: "` without the double quotes, but will be different 340for other regions. 341 342Note that Ninja supports this natively now, with the use of `deps = msvc` and 343`msvc_deps_prefix` in Ninja files. Native support also avoids launching an extra 344tool process each time the compiler must be called, which can speed up builds 345noticeably on Windows. 346 347`wincodepage`:: Available on Windows hosts (_since Ninja 1.11_). 348Prints the Windows code page whose encoding is expected in the build file. 349The output has the form: 350+ 351---- 352Build file encoding: <codepage> 353---- 354+ 355Additional lines may be added in future versions of Ninja. 356+ 357The `<codepage>` is one of: 358 359`UTF-8`::: Encode as UTF-8. 360 361`ANSI`::: Encode to the system-wide ANSI code page. 362 363Writing your own Ninja files 364---------------------------- 365 366The remainder of this manual is only useful if you are constructing 367Ninja files yourself: for example, if you're writing a meta-build 368system or supporting a new language. 369 370Conceptual overview 371~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 372 373Ninja evaluates a graph of dependencies between files, and runs 374whichever commands are necessary to make your build target up to date 375as determined by file modification times. If you are familiar with 376Make, Ninja is very similar. 377 378A build file (default name: `build.ninja`) provides a list of _rules_ 379-- short names for longer commands, like how to run the compiler -- 380along with a list of _build_ statements saying how to build files 381using the rules -- which rule to apply to which inputs to produce 382which outputs. 383 384Conceptually, `build` statements describe the dependency graph of your 385project, while `rule` statements describe how to generate the files 386along a given edge of the graph. 387 388Syntax example 389~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 390 391Here's a basic `.ninja` file that demonstrates most of the syntax. 392It will be used as an example for the following sections. 393 394--------------------------------- 395cflags = -Wall 396 397rule cc 398 command = gcc $cflags -c $in -o $out 399 400build foo.o: cc foo.c 401--------------------------------- 402 403Variables 404~~~~~~~~~ 405Despite the non-goal of being convenient to write by hand, to keep 406build files readable (debuggable), Ninja supports declaring shorter 407reusable names for strings. A declaration like the following 408 409---------------- 410cflags = -g 411---------------- 412 413can be used on the right side of an equals sign, dereferencing it with 414a dollar sign, like this: 415 416---------------- 417rule cc 418 command = gcc $cflags -c $in -o $out 419---------------- 420 421Variables can also be referenced using curly braces like `${in}`. 422 423Variables might better be called "bindings", in that a given variable 424cannot be changed, only shadowed. There is more on how shadowing works 425later in this document. 426 427Rules 428~~~~~ 429 430Rules declare a short name for a command line. They begin with a line 431consisting of the `rule` keyword and a name for the rule. Then 432follows an indented set of `variable = value` lines. 433 434The basic example above declares a new rule named `cc`, along with the 435command to run. In the context of a rule, the `command` variable 436defines the command to run, `$in` expands to the list of 437input files (`foo.c`), and `$out` to the output files (`foo.o`) for the 438command. A full list of special variables is provided in 439<<ref_rule,the reference>>. 440 441Build statements 442~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 443 444Build statements declare a relationship between input and output 445files. They begin with the `build` keyword, and have the format 446+build _outputs_: _rulename_ _inputs_+. Such a declaration says that 447all of the output files are derived from the input files. When the 448output files are missing or when the inputs change, Ninja will run the 449rule to regenerate the outputs. 450 451The basic example above describes how to build `foo.o`, using the `cc` 452rule. 453 454In the scope of a `build` block (including in the evaluation of its 455associated `rule`), the variable `$in` is the list of inputs and the 456variable `$out` is the list of outputs. 457 458A build statement may be followed by an indented set of `key = value` 459pairs, much like a rule. These variables will shadow any variables 460when evaluating the variables in the command. For example: 461 462---------------- 463cflags = -Wall -Werror 464rule cc 465 command = gcc $cflags -c $in -o $out 466 467# If left unspecified, builds get the outer $cflags. 468build foo.o: cc foo.c 469 470# But you can shadow variables like cflags for a particular build. 471build special.o: cc special.c 472 cflags = -Wall 473 474# The variable was only shadowed for the scope of special.o; 475# Subsequent build lines get the outer (original) cflags. 476build bar.o: cc bar.c 477 478---------------- 479 480For more discussion of how scoping works, consult <<ref_scope,the 481reference>>. 482 483If you need more complicated information passed from the build 484statement to the rule (for example, if the rule needs "the file 485extension of the first input"), pass that through as an extra 486variable, like how `cflags` is passed above. 487 488If the top-level Ninja file is specified as an output of any build 489statement and it is out of date, Ninja will rebuild and reload it 490before building the targets requested by the user. 491 492Generating Ninja files from code 493~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 494 495`misc/ninja_syntax.py` in the Ninja distribution is a tiny Python 496module to facilitate generating Ninja files. It allows you to make 497Python calls like `ninja.rule(name='foo', command='bar', 498depfile='$out.d')` and it will generate the appropriate syntax. Feel 499free to just inline it into your project's build system if it's 500useful. 501 502 503More details 504------------ 505 506The `phony` rule 507~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 508 509The special rule name `phony` can be used to create aliases for other 510targets. For example: 511 512---------------- 513build foo: phony some/file/in/a/faraway/subdir/foo 514---------------- 515 516This makes `ninja foo` build the longer path. Semantically, the 517`phony` rule is equivalent to a plain rule where the `command` does 518nothing, but phony rules are handled specially in that they aren't 519printed when run, logged (see below), nor do they contribute to the 520command count printed as part of the build process. 521 522When a `phony` target is used as an input to another build rule, the 523other build rule will, semantically, consider the inputs of the 524`phony` rule as its own. Therefore, `phony` rules can be used to group 525inputs, e.g. header files. 526 527`phony` can also be used to create dummy targets for files which 528may not exist at build time. If a phony build statement is written 529without any dependencies, the target will be considered out of date if 530it does not exist. Without a phony build statement, Ninja will report 531an error if the file does not exist and is required by the build. 532 533To create a rule that never rebuilds, use a build rule without any input: 534---------------- 535rule touch 536 command = touch $out 537build file_that_always_exists.dummy: touch 538build dummy_target_to_follow_a_pattern: phony file_that_always_exists.dummy 539---------------- 540 541 542Default target statements 543~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 544 545By default, if no targets are specified on the command line, Ninja 546will build every output that is not named as an input elsewhere. 547You can override this behavior using a default target statement. 548A default target statement causes Ninja to build only a given subset 549of output files if none are specified on the command line. 550 551Default target statements begin with the `default` keyword, and have 552the format +default _targets_+. A default target statement must appear 553after the build statement that declares the target as an output file. 554They are cumulative, so multiple statements may be used to extend 555the list of default targets. For example: 556 557---------------- 558default foo bar 559default baz 560---------------- 561 562This causes Ninja to build the `foo`, `bar` and `baz` targets by 563default. 564 565 566[[ref_log]] 567The Ninja log 568~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 569 570For each built file, Ninja keeps a log of the command used to build 571it. Using this log Ninja can know when an existing output was built 572with a different command line than the build files specify (i.e., the 573command line changed) and knows to rebuild the file. 574 575The log file is kept in the build root in a file called `.ninja_log`. 576If you provide a variable named `builddir` in the outermost scope, 577`.ninja_log` will be kept in that directory instead. 578 579 580[[ref_versioning]] 581Version compatibility 582~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 583 584_Available since Ninja 1.2._ 585 586Ninja version labels follow the standard major.minor.patch format, 587where the major version is increased on backwards-incompatible 588syntax/behavioral changes and the minor version is increased on new 589behaviors. Your `build.ninja` may declare a variable named 590`ninja_required_version` that asserts the minimum Ninja version 591required to use the generated file. For example, 592 593----- 594ninja_required_version = 1.1 595----- 596 597declares that the build file relies on some feature that was 598introduced in Ninja 1.1 (perhaps the `pool` syntax), and that 599Ninja 1.1 or greater must be used to build. Unlike other Ninja 600variables, this version requirement is checked immediately when 601the variable is encountered in parsing, so it's best to put it 602at the top of the build file. 603 604Ninja always warns if the major versions of Ninja and the 605`ninja_required_version` don't match; a major version change hasn't 606come up yet so it's difficult to predict what behavior might be 607required. 608 609[[ref_headers]] 610C/C++ header dependencies 611~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 612 613To get C/C++ header dependencies (or any other build dependency that 614works in a similar way) correct Ninja has some extra functionality. 615 616The problem with headers is that the full list of files that a given 617source file depends on can only be discovered by the compiler: 618different preprocessor defines and include paths cause different files 619to be used. Some compilers can emit this information while building, 620and Ninja can use that to get its dependencies perfect. 621 622Consider: if the file has never been compiled, it must be built anyway, 623generating the header dependencies as a side effect. If any file is 624later modified (even in a way that changes which headers it depends 625on) the modification will cause a rebuild as well, keeping the 626dependencies up to date. 627 628When loading these special dependencies, Ninja implicitly adds extra 629build edges such that it is not an error if the listed dependency is 630missing. This allows you to delete a header file and rebuild without 631the build aborting due to a missing input. 632 633depfile 634^^^^^^^ 635 636`gcc` (and other compilers like `clang`) support emitting dependency 637information in the syntax of a Makefile. (Any command that can write 638dependencies in this form can be used, not just `gcc`.) 639 640To bring this information into Ninja requires cooperation. On the 641Ninja side, the `depfile` attribute on the `build` must point to a 642path where this data is written. (Ninja only supports the limited 643subset of the Makefile syntax emitted by compilers.) Then the command 644must know to write dependencies into the `depfile` path. 645Use it like in the following example: 646 647---- 648rule cc 649 depfile = $out.d 650 command = gcc -MD -MF $out.d [other gcc flags here] 651---- 652 653The `-MD` flag to `gcc` tells it to output header dependencies, and 654the `-MF` flag tells it where to write them. 655 656deps 657^^^^ 658 659_(Available since Ninja 1.3.)_ 660 661It turns out that for large projects (and particularly on Windows, 662where the file system is slow) loading these dependency files on 663startup is slow. 664 665Ninja 1.3 can instead process dependencies just after they're generated 666and save a compacted form of the same information in a Ninja-internal 667database. 668 669Ninja supports this processing in two forms. 670 6711. `deps = gcc` specifies that the tool outputs `gcc`-style dependencies 672 in the form of Makefiles. Adding this to the above example will 673 cause Ninja to process the `depfile` immediately after the 674 compilation finishes, then delete the `.d` file (which is only used 675 as a temporary). 676 6772. `deps = msvc` specifies that the tool outputs header dependencies 678 in the form produced by Visual Studio's compiler's 679 http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hdkef6tk(v=vs.90).aspx[`/showIncludes` 680 flag]. Briefly, this means the tool outputs specially-formatted lines 681 to its stdout. Ninja then filters these lines from the displayed 682 output. No `depfile` attribute is necessary, but the localized string 683 in front of the the header file path. For instance 684 `msvc_deps_prefix = Note: including file:` 685 for a English Visual Studio (the default). Should be globally defined. 686+ 687---- 688msvc_deps_prefix = Note: including file: 689rule cc 690 deps = msvc 691 command = cl /showIncludes -c $in /Fo$out 692---- 693 694If the include directory directives are using absolute paths, your depfile 695may result in a mixture of relative and absolute paths. Paths used by other 696build rules need to match exactly. Therefore, it is recommended to use 697relative paths in these cases. 698 699[[ref_pool]] 700Pools 701~~~~~ 702 703_Available since Ninja 1.1._ 704 705Pools allow you to allocate one or more rules or edges a finite number 706of concurrent jobs which is more tightly restricted than the default 707parallelism. 708 709This can be useful, for example, to restrict a particular expensive rule 710(like link steps for huge executables), or to restrict particular build 711statements which you know perform poorly when run concurrently. 712 713Each pool has a `depth` variable which is specified in the build file. 714The pool is then referred to with the `pool` variable on either a rule 715or a build statement. 716 717No matter what pools you specify, ninja will never run more concurrent jobs 718than the default parallelism, or the number of jobs specified on the command 719line (with `-j`). 720 721---------------- 722# No more than 4 links at a time. 723pool link_pool 724 depth = 4 725 726# No more than 1 heavy object at a time. 727pool heavy_object_pool 728 depth = 1 729 730rule link 731 ... 732 pool = link_pool 733 734rule cc 735 ... 736 737# The link_pool is used here. Only 4 links will run concurrently. 738build foo.exe: link input.obj 739 740# A build statement can be exempted from its rule's pool by setting an 741# empty pool. This effectively puts the build statement back into the default 742# pool, which has infinite depth. 743build other.exe: link input.obj 744 pool = 745 746# A build statement can specify a pool directly. 747# Only one of these builds will run at a time. 748build heavy_object1.obj: cc heavy_obj1.cc 749 pool = heavy_object_pool 750build heavy_object2.obj: cc heavy_obj2.cc 751 pool = heavy_object_pool 752 753---------------- 754 755The `console` pool 756^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 757 758_Available since Ninja 1.5._ 759 760There exists a pre-defined pool named `console` with a depth of 1. It has 761the special property that any task in the pool has direct access to the 762standard input, output and error streams provided to Ninja, which are 763normally connected to the user's console (hence the name) but could be 764redirected. This can be useful for interactive tasks or long-running tasks 765which produce status updates on the console (such as test suites). 766 767While a task in the `console` pool is running, Ninja's regular output (such 768as progress status and output from concurrent tasks) is buffered until 769it completes. 770 771[[ref_ninja_file]] 772Ninja file reference 773-------------------- 774 775A file is a series of declarations. A declaration can be one of: 776 7771. A rule declaration, which begins with +rule _rulename_+, and 778 then has a series of indented lines defining variables. 779 7802. A build edge, which looks like +build _output1_ _output2_: 781 _rulename_ _input1_ _input2_+. + 782 Implicit dependencies may be tacked on the end with +| 783 _dependency1_ _dependency2_+. + 784 Order-only dependencies may be tacked on the end with +|| 785 _dependency1_ _dependency2_+. (See <<ref_dependencies,the reference on 786 dependency types>>.) 787 Validations may be taked on the end with +|@ _validation1_ _validation2_+. 788 (See <<validations,the reference on validations>>.) 789+ 790Implicit outputs _(available since Ninja 1.7)_ may be added before 791the `:` with +| _output1_ _output2_+ and do not appear in `$out`. 792(See <<ref_outputs,the reference on output types>>.) 793 7943. Variable declarations, which look like +_variable_ = _value_+. 795 7964. Default target statements, which look like +default _target1_ _target2_+. 797 7985. References to more files, which look like +subninja _path_+ or 799 +include _path_+. The difference between these is explained below 800 <<ref_scope,in the discussion about scoping>>. 801 8026. A pool declaration, which looks like +pool _poolname_+. Pools are explained 803 <<ref_pool, in the section on pools>>. 804 805[[ref_lexer]] 806Lexical syntax 807~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 808 809Ninja is mostly encoding agnostic, as long as the bytes Ninja cares 810about (like slashes in paths) are ASCII. This means e.g. UTF-8 or 811ISO-8859-1 input files ought to work. 812 813Comments begin with `#` and extend to the end of the line. 814 815Newlines are significant. Statements like `build foo bar` are a set 816of space-separated tokens that end at the newline. Newlines and 817spaces within a token must be escaped. 818 819There is only one escape character, `$`, and it has the following 820behaviors: 821 822`$` followed by a newline:: escape the newline (continue the current line 823across a line break). 824 825`$` followed by text:: a variable reference. 826 827`${varname}`:: alternate syntax for `$varname`. 828 829`$` followed by space:: a space. (This is only necessary in lists of 830paths, where a space would otherwise separate filenames. See below.) 831 832`$:` :: a colon. (This is only necessary in `build` lines, where a colon 833would otherwise terminate the list of outputs.) 834 835`$$`:: a literal `$`. 836 837A `build` or `default` statement is first parsed as a space-separated 838list of filenames and then each name is expanded. This means that 839spaces within a variable will result in spaces in the expanded 840filename. 841 842---- 843spaced = foo bar 844build $spaced/baz other$ file: ... 845# The above build line has two outputs: "foo bar/baz" and "other file". 846---- 847 848In a `name = value` statement, whitespace at the beginning of a value 849is always stripped. Whitespace at the beginning of a line after a 850line continuation is also stripped. 851 852---- 853two_words_with_one_space = foo $ 854 bar 855one_word_with_no_space = foo$ 856 bar 857---- 858 859Other whitespace is only significant if it's at the beginning of a 860line. If a line is indented more than the previous one, it's 861considered part of its parent's scope; if it is indented less than the 862previous one, it closes the previous scope. 863 864[[ref_toplevel]] 865Top-level variables 866~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 867 868Two variables are significant when declared in the outermost file scope. 869 870`builddir`:: a directory for some Ninja output files. See <<ref_log,the 871 discussion of the build log>>. (You can also store other build output 872 in this directory.) 873 874`ninja_required_version`:: the minimum version of Ninja required to process 875 the build correctly. See <<ref_versioning,the discussion of versioning>>. 876 877 878[[ref_rule]] 879Rule variables 880~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 881 882A `rule` block contains a list of `key = value` declarations that 883affect the processing of the rule. Here is a full list of special 884keys. 885 886`command` (_required_):: the command line to run. Each `rule` may 887 have only one `command` declaration. See <<ref_rule_command,the next 888 section>> for more details on quoting and executing multiple commands. 889 890`depfile`:: path to an optional `Makefile` that contains extra 891 _implicit dependencies_ (see <<ref_dependencies,the reference on 892 dependency types>>). This is explicitly to support C/C++ header 893 dependencies; see <<ref_headers,the full discussion>>. 894 895`deps`:: _(Available since Ninja 1.3.)_ if present, must be one of 896 `gcc` or `msvc` to specify special dependency processing. See 897 <<ref_headers,the full discussion>>. The generated database is 898 stored as `.ninja_deps` in the `builddir`, see <<ref_toplevel,the 899 discussion of `builddir`>>. 900 901`msvc_deps_prefix`:: _(Available since Ninja 1.5.)_ defines the string 902 which should be stripped from msvc's /showIncludes output. Only 903 needed when `deps = msvc` and no English Visual Studio version is used. 904 905`description`:: a short description of the command, used to pretty-print 906 the command as it's running. The `-v` flag controls whether to print 907 the full command or its description; if a command fails, the full command 908 line will always be printed before the command's output. 909 910`dyndep`:: _(Available since Ninja 1.10.)_ Used only on build statements. 911 If present, must name one of the build statement inputs. Dynamically 912 discovered dependency information will be loaded from the file. 913 See the <<ref_dyndep,dynamic dependencies>> section for details. 914 915`generator`:: if present, specifies that this rule is used to 916 re-invoke the generator program. Files built using `generator` 917 rules are treated specially in two ways: firstly, they will not be 918 rebuilt if the command line changes; and secondly, they are not 919 cleaned by default. 920 921`in`:: the space-separated list of files provided as inputs to the build line 922 referencing this `rule`, shell-quoted if it appears in commands. (`$in` is 923 provided solely for convenience; if you need some subset or variant of this 924 list of files, just construct a new variable with that list and use 925 that instead.) 926 927`in_newline`:: the same as `$in` except that multiple inputs are 928 separated by newlines rather than spaces. (For use with 929 `$rspfile_content`; this works around a bug in the MSVC linker where 930 it uses a fixed-size buffer for processing input.) 931 932`out`:: the space-separated list of files provided as outputs to the build line 933 referencing this `rule`, shell-quoted if it appears in commands. 934 935`restat`:: if present, causes Ninja to re-stat the command's outputs 936 after execution of the command. Each output whose modification time 937 the command did not change will be treated as though it had never 938 needed to be built. This may cause the output's reverse 939 dependencies to be removed from the list of pending build actions. 940 941`rspfile`, `rspfile_content`:: if present (both), Ninja will use a 942 response file for the given command, i.e. write the selected string 943 (`rspfile_content`) to the given file (`rspfile`) before calling the 944 command and delete the file after successful execution of the 945 command. 946+ 947This is particularly useful on Windows OS, where the maximal length of 948a command line is limited and response files must be used instead. 949+ 950Use it like in the following example: 951+ 952---- 953rule link 954 command = link.exe /OUT$out [usual link flags here] @$out.rsp 955 rspfile = $out.rsp 956 rspfile_content = $in 957 958build myapp.exe: link a.obj b.obj [possibly many other .obj files] 959---- 960 961[[ref_rule_command]] 962Interpretation of the `command` variable 963^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 964Fundamentally, command lines behave differently on Unixes and Windows. 965 966On Unixes, commands are arrays of arguments. The Ninja `command` 967variable is passed directly to `sh -c`, which is then responsible for 968interpreting that string into an argv array. Therefore the quoting 969rules are those of the shell, and you can use all the normal shell 970operators, like `&&` to chain multiple commands, or `VAR=value cmd` to 971set environment variables. 972 973On Windows, commands are strings, so Ninja passes the `command` string 974directly to `CreateProcess`. (In the common case of simply executing 975a compiler this means there is less overhead.) Consequently the 976quoting rules are determined by the called program, which on Windows 977are usually provided by the C library. If you need shell 978interpretation of the command (such as the use of `&&` to chain 979multiple commands), make the command execute the Windows shell by 980prefixing the command with `cmd /c`. Ninja may error with "invalid parameter" 981which usually indicates that the command line length has been exceeded. 982 983[[ref_outputs]] 984Build outputs 985~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 986 987There are two types of build outputs which are subtly different. 988 9891. _Explicit outputs_, as listed in a build line. These are 990 available as the `$out` variable in the rule. 991+ 992This is the standard form of output to be used for e.g. the 993object file of a compile command. 994 9952. _Implicit outputs_, as listed in a build line with the syntax +| 996 _out1_ _out2_+ + before the `:` of a build line _(available since 997 Ninja 1.7)_. The semantics are identical to explicit outputs, 998 the only difference is that implicit outputs don't show up in the 999 `$out` variable. 1000+ 1001This is for expressing outputs that don't show up on the 1002command line of the command. 1003 1004[[ref_dependencies]] 1005Build dependencies 1006~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1007 1008There are three types of build dependencies which are subtly different. 1009 10101. _Explicit dependencies_, as listed in a build line. These are 1011 available as the `$in` variable in the rule. Changes in these files 1012 cause the output to be rebuilt; if these files are missing and 1013 Ninja doesn't know how to build them, the build is aborted. 1014+ 1015This is the standard form of dependency to be used e.g. for the 1016source file of a compile command. 1017 10182. _Implicit dependencies_, either as picked up from 1019 a `depfile` attribute on a rule or from the syntax +| _dep1_ 1020 _dep2_+ on the end of a build line. The semantics are identical to 1021 explicit dependencies, the only difference is that implicit dependencies 1022 don't show up in the `$in` variable. 1023+ 1024This is for expressing dependencies that don't show up on the 1025command line of the command; for example, for a rule that runs a 1026script that reads a hardcoded file, the hardcoded file should 1027be an implicit dependency, as changes to the file should cause 1028the output to rebuild, even though it doesn't show up in the arguments. 1029+ 1030Note that dependencies as loaded through depfiles have slightly different 1031semantics, as described in the <<ref_rule,rule reference>>. 1032 10333. _Order-only dependencies_, expressed with the syntax +|| _dep1_ 1034 _dep2_+ on the end of a build line. When these are out of date, the 1035 output is not rebuilt until they are built, but changes in order-only 1036 dependencies alone do not cause the output to be rebuilt. 1037+ 1038Order-only dependencies can be useful for bootstrapping dependencies 1039that are only discovered during build time: for example, to generate a 1040header file before starting a subsequent compilation step. (Once the 1041header is used in compilation, a generated dependency file will then 1042express the implicit dependency.) 1043 1044File paths are compared as is, which means that an absolute path and a 1045relative path, pointing to the same file, are considered different by Ninja. 1046 1047[[validations]] 1048Validations 1049~~~~~~~~~~~ 1050Validations listed on the build line cause the specified files to be 1051added to the top level of the build graph (as if they were specified 1052on the Ninja command line) whenever the build line is a transitive 1053dependency of one of the targets specified on the command line or a 1054default target. 1055 1056Validations are added to the build graph regardless of whether the output 1057files of the build statement are dirty are not, and the dirty state of 1058the build statement that outputs the file being used as a validation 1059has no effect on the dirty state of the build statement that requested it. 1060 1061A build edge can list another build edge as a validation even if the second 1062edge depends on the first. 1063 1064Validations are designed to handle rules that perform error checking but 1065don't produce any artifacts needed by the build, for example static 1066analysis tools. Marking the static analysis rule as an implicit input 1067of the main build rule of the source files or of the rules that depend 1068on the main build rule would slow down the critical path of the build, 1069but using a validation would allow the build to proceed in parallel with 1070the static analysis rule once the main build rule is complete. 1071 1072Variable expansion 1073~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1074 1075Variables are expanded in paths (in a `build` or `default` statement) 1076and on the right side of a `name = value` statement. 1077 1078When a `name = value` statement is evaluated, its right-hand side is 1079expanded immediately (according to the below scoping rules), and 1080from then on `$name` expands to the static string as the result of the 1081expansion. It is never the case that you'll need to "double-escape" a 1082value to prevent it from getting expanded twice. 1083 1084All variables are expanded immediately as they're encountered in parsing, 1085with one important exception: variables in `rule` blocks are expanded 1086when the rule is _used_, not when it is declared. In the following 1087example, the `demo` rule prints "this is a demo of bar". 1088 1089---- 1090rule demo 1091 command = echo "this is a demo of $foo" 1092 1093build out: demo 1094 foo = bar 1095---- 1096 1097[[ref_scope]] 1098Evaluation and scoping 1099~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1100 1101Top-level variable declarations are scoped to the file they occur in. 1102 1103Rule declarations are also scoped to the file they occur in. 1104_(Available since Ninja 1.6)_ 1105 1106The `subninja` keyword, used to include another `.ninja` file, 1107introduces a new scope. The included `subninja` file may use the 1108variables and rules from the parent file, and shadow their values for the file's 1109scope, but it won't affect values of the variables in the parent. 1110 1111To include another `.ninja` file in the current scope, much like a C 1112`#include` statement, use `include` instead of `subninja`. 1113 1114Variable declarations indented in a `build` block are scoped to the 1115`build` block. The full lookup order for a variable expanded in a 1116`build` block (or the `rule` is uses) is: 1117 11181. Special built-in variables (`$in`, `$out`). 1119 11202. Build-level variables from the `build` block. 1121 11223. Rule-level variables from the `rule` block (i.e. `$command`). 1123 (Note from the above discussion on expansion that these are 1124 expanded "late", and may make use of in-scope bindings like `$in`.) 1125 11264. File-level variables from the file that the `build` line was in. 1127 11285. Variables from the file that included that file using the 1129 `subninja` keyword. 1130 1131[[ref_dyndep]] 1132Dynamic Dependencies 1133-------------------- 1134 1135_Available since Ninja 1.10._ 1136 1137Some use cases require implicit dependency information to be dynamically 1138discovered from source file content _during the build_ in order to build 1139correctly on the first run (e.g. Fortran module dependencies). This is 1140unlike <<ref_headers,header dependencies>> which are only needed on the 1141second run and later to rebuild correctly. A build statement may have a 1142`dyndep` binding naming one of its inputs to specify that dynamic 1143dependency information must be loaded from the file. For example: 1144 1145---- 1146build out: ... || foo 1147 dyndep = foo 1148build foo: ... 1149---- 1150 1151This specifies that file `foo` is a dyndep file. Since it is an input, 1152the build statement for `out` can never be executed before `foo` is built. 1153As soon as `foo` is finished Ninja will read it to load dynamically 1154discovered dependency information for `out`. This may include additional 1155implicit inputs and/or outputs. Ninja will update the build graph 1156accordingly and the build will proceed as if the information was known 1157originally. 1158 1159Dyndep file reference 1160~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1161 1162Files specified by `dyndep` bindings use the same <<ref_lexer,lexical syntax>> 1163as <<ref_ninja_file,ninja build files>> and have the following layout. 1164 11651. A version number in the form `<major>[.<minor>][<suffix>]`: 1166+ 1167---- 1168ninja_dyndep_version = 1 1169---- 1170+ 1171Currently the version number must always be `1` or `1.0` but may have 1172an arbitrary suffix. 1173 11742. One or more build statements of the form: 1175+ 1176---- 1177build out | imp-outs... : dyndep | imp-ins... 1178---- 1179+ 1180Every statement must specify exactly one explicit output and must use 1181the rule name `dyndep`. The `| imp-outs...` and `| imp-ins...` portions 1182are optional. 1183 11843. An optional `restat` <<ref_rule,variable binding>> on each build statement. 1185 1186The build statements in a dyndep file must have a one-to-one correspondence 1187to build statements in the <<ref_ninja_file,ninja build file>> that name the 1188dyndep file in a `dyndep` binding. No dyndep build statement may be omitted 1189and no extra build statements may be specified. 1190 1191Dyndep Examples 1192~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1193 1194Fortran Modules 1195^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1196 1197Consider a Fortran source file `foo.f90` that provides a module 1198`foo.mod` (an implicit output of compilation) and another source file 1199`bar.f90` that uses the module (an implicit input of compilation). This 1200implicit dependency must be discovered before we compile either source 1201in order to ensure that `bar.f90` never compiles before `foo.f90`, and 1202that `bar.f90` recompiles when `foo.mod` changes. We can achieve this 1203as follows: 1204 1205---- 1206rule f95 1207 command = f95 -o $out -c $in 1208rule fscan 1209 command = fscan -o $out $in 1210 1211build foobar.dd: fscan foo.f90 bar.f90 1212 1213build foo.o: f95 foo.f90 || foobar.dd 1214 dyndep = foobar.dd 1215build bar.o: f95 bar.f90 || foobar.dd 1216 dyndep = foobar.dd 1217---- 1218 1219In this example the order-only dependencies ensure that `foobar.dd` is 1220generated before either source compiles. The hypothetical `fscan` tool 1221scans the source files, assumes each will be compiled to a `.o` of the 1222same name, and writes `foobar.dd` with content such as: 1223 1224---- 1225ninja_dyndep_version = 1 1226build foo.o | foo.mod: dyndep 1227build bar.o: dyndep | foo.mod 1228---- 1229 1230Ninja will load this file to add `foo.mod` as an implicit output of 1231`foo.o` and implicit input of `bar.o`. This ensures that the Fortran 1232sources are always compiled in the proper order and recompiled when 1233needed. 1234 1235Tarball Extraction 1236^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1237 1238Consider a tarball `foo.tar` that we want to extract. The extraction time 1239can be recorded with a `foo.tar.stamp` file so that extraction repeats if 1240the tarball changes, but we also would like to re-extract if any of the 1241outputs is missing. However, the list of outputs depends on the content 1242of the tarball and cannot be spelled out explicitly in the ninja build file. 1243We can achieve this as follows: 1244 1245---- 1246rule untar 1247 command = tar xf $in && touch $out 1248rule scantar 1249 command = scantar --stamp=$stamp --dd=$out $in 1250build foo.tar.dd: scantar foo.tar 1251 stamp = foo.tar.stamp 1252build foo.tar.stamp: untar foo.tar || foo.tar.dd 1253 dyndep = foo.tar.dd 1254---- 1255 1256In this example the order-only dependency ensures that `foo.tar.dd` is 1257built before the tarball extracts. The hypothetical `scantar` tool 1258will read the tarball (e.g. via `tar tf`) and write `foo.tar.dd` with 1259content such as: 1260 1261---- 1262ninja_dyndep_version = 1 1263build foo.tar.stamp | file1.txt file2.txt : dyndep 1264 restat = 1 1265---- 1266 1267Ninja will load this file to add `file1.txt` and `file2.txt` as implicit 1268outputs of `foo.tar.stamp`, and to mark the build statement for `restat`. 1269On future builds, if any implicit output is missing the tarball will be 1270extracted again. The `restat` binding tells Ninja to tolerate the fact 1271that the implicit outputs may not have modification times newer than 1272the tarball itself (avoiding re-extraction on every build). 1273