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<!--
__COPYRIGHT__
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WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
-->
<para>
Configuring the right options to build programs to work with
libraries--especially shared libraries--that are available
on POSIX systems can be very complicated.
To help this situation,
various utilies with names that end in <filename>config</filename>
return the command-line options for the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)
that are needed to use these libraries;
for example, the command-line options
to use a library named <filename>lib</filename>
would be found by calling a utility named <filename>lib-config</filename>.
</para>
<para>
A more recent convention is that these options
are available from the generic <filename>pkg-config</filename> program,
which has common framework, error handling, and the like,
so that all the package creator has to do is provide the set of strings
for his particular package.
</para>
<para>
&SCons; construction environments have a &ParseConfig; method
that executes a <filename>*config</filename> utility
(either <filename>pkg-config</filename> or a
more specific utility)
and configures the appropriate construction variables
in the environment
based on the command-line options
returned by the specified command.
</para>
<scons_example name="ParseConfig1">
<file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
env = Environment()
env['CPPPATH'] = ['/lib/compat']
env.ParseConfig("pkg-config x11 --cflags --libs")
print env['CPPPATH']
</file>
</scons_example>
<para>
&SCons; will execute the specified command string,
parse the resultant flags,
and add the flags to the appropriate environment variables.
</para>
<!--
This is how we used to generate the screen output below, but
as of (at least) Ubuntu Karmic, the pkg-config output for x11
no longer reports back an include directory. Since this is just
for example anyway, we're just hard-coding the output.
<scons_output example="ParseConfig1">
<scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
</scons_output>
-->
<screen>
% <userinput>scons -Q</userinput>
['/lib/compat', '/usr/X11/include']
scons: `.' is up to date.
</screen>
<para>
In the example above, &SCons; has added the include directory to
<varname>CPPPATH</varname>.
(Depending upon what other flags are emitted by the
<filename>pkg-config</filename> command,
other variables may have been extended as well.)
</para>
<para>
Note that the options are merged with existing options using
the &MergeFlags; method,
so that each option only occurs once in the construction variable:
</para>
<scons_example name="ParseConfig2">
<file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
env = Environment()
env.ParseConfig("pkg-config x11 --cflags --libs")
env.ParseConfig("pkg-config x11 --cflags --libs")
print env['CPPPATH']
</file>
</scons_example>
<!--
This is how we used to generate the screen output below, but
as of (at least) Ubuntu Karmic, the pkg-config output for x11
no longer reports back an include directory. Since this is just
for example anyway, we're just hard-coding the output.
<scons_output example="ParseConfig2">
<scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
</scons_output>
-->
<screen>
% <userinput>scons -Q</userinput>
['/usr/X11/include']
scons: `.' is up to date.
</screen>
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