The ConanFile
class has a lot of different properties that can help consumers search for projects, help the client build packages for different configurations
or are known by ConanCenter's build service and have special meaning.
These are a key feature which allow the Conan client to understand, identify, and expose recipes and which project they expose.
In ConanCenter, there are a few conventions that need to be respected to ensure recipes can be discovered there conan search
command
of through the web UI. Many of which are enforces with the hooks.
Same as the recipe folder and always lowercase.
Please see the FAQs for:
ConanCenter is geared towards quickly added new release, the build service always pass the version it is currently building to the recipe.
The version
attribute MUST NOT be added to any recipe - with exception to "system packages".
The notation shown below is used for publishing packages which do not match the original library's official releases. This format which includes the "datestamp" corresponding to the date of a commit: cci.<YEAR MONTH DAY>
.
In order to create reproducible builds, we also "commit-lock" to the latest commit on that day. Otherwise, users would get inconsistent results over time when rebuilding the package. An example of this is the RapidJSON library, where its package reference is rapidjson/cci.20200410
and its sources are locked the latest commit on that date in config.yml. The prefix cci.
is mandatory to distinguish as a virtual version provided by CCI. If you are interested to know about the origin, please, read here.
The mandatory license attribute of each recipe should be a SPDX license short Identifiers when applicable.
Where the SPDX guidelines do not apply, packages should do the following:
- When no license is provided or it's under the "public domain" - these are not a license by itself. Thus, we have equivalent licenses that should be used instead. If a project falls under these criteria it should be identified as the Unlicense license.
- When a custom (e.g. project specific) license is given, the value should be set to
LicenseRef-
as a prefix, followed by the name of the file which contains the custom license. See this example. For more details, read this conversation.
Prefer the following order of documented methods in python code (conanfile.py
, test_package/conanfile.py
):
For conan create
the order is listed here
test packages recipes should append the following methods:
- deploy
- test
the order above resembles the execution order of methods on CI. therefore, for instance, build
is always executed before package
method, so build
should appear before the
package
in conanfile.py
.
As a general rule, recipes should set the settings
attribute to: os
, arch
, compiler
and build_type
, and let Conan compute the package ID based on the settings. Some exceptions apply, as detailed below. For cases not covered here, please reach out to the Conan Center maintainers team for assistance. The following list is not exhaustive:
-
Recipes for header only libraries or where the contents of the package are the same irrespective of settings, might omit the
settings
attribute altogether, unless there is any logic conditional on a setting value. If the recipe has options or dependencies, but the contents of the package are invariant irrespective of their values, the following logic must be added to ensure a single, unique package ID:def package_id(self): self.info.clear()
-
Recipes that primarily provide compiled applications (e.g.
b2
,cmake
,make
, ...), which typically applies to packages that are consumed as tool requires) must list all the settings as well, as they are required during package creation. However, it is advised that thecompiler
setting is removed one in thepackage_id()
method as follows:def package_id(self): del self.info.settings.compiler
This reflects those cases where tools are consumed exclusively as executables, irrespective of how they were built. Additionally, this reduces the number of configurations generated by CI.
Note We do not recommend removing the
build_type
setting on these packages, in order to preserve the ability of consumers to run debug executables should they wish to do so.
Recipes can list any number of options with any meaning, and defaults are up to the recipe itself. The CI cannot enforce anything in this direction. However, there are a couple of options that have a special meaning for the CI.
Adding options is often needed to toggle specific library features on/off. Regardless of the default, there is a strong preference for using positive naming for options. In order to avoid the fragmentation, we recommend using the following naming conventions for such options:
- enable_ / disable_
- with_ / without_
- use_
The actual recipe code then may look like:
options = {"enable_locales": [True, False]} # Changes which files are compiled in to the library
default_options = {"enable_locales": True}
options = {"with_zlib": [True, False]} # Will add a `self.requires` with more deps to link against
default_options = {"with_zlib": True}
options = {"use_tzdb": [True, False]} # Might install more headers to expose more features
default_options = {"use_tzdb": True}
Having the same naming conventions for the options helps consumers. It allows users to specify options with wildcards: -o *:with_threads=True
. Therefore, the with_threads
options will be enabled for all packages in the graph that support it.
ConanCenter supports many combinations, these are outline in the supported configurations document for each platform.
By default recipes should use shared=False
with fPIC=True
. If support, header_only=False
is the default.
Usage of each option should follow the rules:
-
shared
(with valuesTrue
orFalse
). The CI inspects the recipe looking for this option. The default should beshared=False
and will generate all the configurations with valuesshared=True
andshared=False
.Note: The CI applies
shared=True
only to the package being built, while every other requirement willshared=False
. To consume everything as a shared library you will set--build=always
and/or-o *:shared=True
) It's important to keep this in mind when trying to consume shared packages from ConanCenter as their requirements were linked inside the shared library. See FAQs for more information. -
fPIC
(with valuesTrue
orFalse
). The default should befPIC=True
and will generate all the configurations with valuesfPIC=True
andfPIC=False
. This option does not make sense on all the support configurations so it should be removed.def config_options(self): if self.settings.os == "Windows": del self.options.fPIC def configure(self): if self.options.shared: self.options.rm_safe("fPIC")
-
header_only
(with valuesTrue
orFalse
). The default should beheader_only=False
. If the CI detects this option, it will generate all the configurations for the valueheader_only=False
and add one more configuration withheader_only=True
. Only one package will be generated forheader_only=True
, so it is crucial that the package is actually a header only library, with header files only (no libraries or executables inside).Recipes with such option should include the following in their
package_id
methoddef package_id(self): if self.options.header_only: self.info.clear()
ensuring that, when the option is active, the recipe ignores all the settings and only one package ID is generated.
-
build_testing
should not be added, nor any other related unit test option. Options affect the package ID, therefore, testing should not be part of that. Instead, use Conan config skip_test feature:def generate(self): tc = CMakeToolChain(self) tc.variables['BUILD_TESTING'] = not self.conf.get("tools.build:skip_test", default=true, check_type=bool)
The
skip_test
configuration is supported by CMake and Meson.
By default, options are included in the calculation for the package_id
(docs).
Options which do not impact the generated packages should be deleted, for instance adding a #define
for a package.
def package_id(self):
del self.info.options.enable_feature
def package_info(self):
if self.options.enable_feature:
self.cpp_info.defines.append("FOBAR_FEATURE=1")