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GYP can Generate Your Projects.

This fork of the upstream GIT repo at Google has several additional features:

  1. The msvs generator sets a property to prevent VS2010+ from attempting to link into the application *.obj files that are sources for copies or actions. crbug 525. See branch crbug-525.

  2. The msvs generator supports Emscripten's vs-tool plug-in for Visual Studio 2010. That is, it recognizes the properties vs-tool offers to control the Emscripten compiler and linker. These properties can be included in an msvs_settings dictionary. Note vs-tool only supports VS 2010. See branch vs-tool_support.

    All GYP msvs and ninja tests pass on Windows with these changes.

  3. The make generator relativizes source paths of copies that contain, but don't start with, environment variables, e.g $(BUILDTYPE). Standard GYP only relativizes paths not containing environment variables. The make generator also relativizes paths specified in library_dirs. See branch make_changes_copies for the first and crbug-512 for the second.

    All GYP make, ninja and cmake tests pass on Linux with these changes.

  4. Fixes for crbugs 512, crbugs 513 and crbugs 514. See branch crbug-NNN.

  5. A fix for crbug 550 in the Xcode generator.

  6. The make generator has various changes to to better support generating projects to build Android native applications. These include additions to the make_global_settings dictionary such as being able to create simply expanded variables and to specify a TARGET_ABI. The latter becomes a component of builddir in the generated make files. It also in include changes to the handling of path relativization in various cases in addition to those no. 3. See branch make_changes_all.

    These changes are a work in progress and are known to break several of the GYP make generator tests.

  7. Changes to support Visual Studio 2019. These have been imported from PR #22 in @refacks fork of GYP.

Branch remaster contains 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 7 as of this writing.

Branch master is identical with upstream/master, retained so gclient tools can be used to upload changes to GYP's Gerrit for review.

No. 1 has been submitted as a patch in crbug 525.

No. 2 will not be submitted upstream as there are no plans for vs-tool to support anything more modern than Visual Studio 2010.

No. 3 may be submitted in future.

No. 4 bug fixes have been submitted to Google.

No. 5 bug fix has been reported to Google and PR #40 has been submitted to the GYP3 repo. on GitHub.

No. 6 is not yet complete.

No. 7 will not be submitted.

The following feature originating from this fork has been merged into upstream's master and the master branch of this repo.

  • The xcode generator recognizes the full set of build variables that correspond to the set of destination names for the copy phase, as appears in the Xcode UI. See the commit for the changes.

Installing GYP

GYP is a Python application. It is compatible with Python 2.7 and Python 3. 3.7+ is recommended.

To install, clone the repo to your machine and run the following commands in a shell:

cd <your_gyp_clone>; sudo ./setup.py install

On Windows, use either a Git Bash or Cygwin Bash shell and omit the sudo. Alternatively enter the following commands at a Windows Command Prompt (cmd.exe):

cd <your_gyp_clone>
python setup.py install

Documents are available at gyp.gsrc.io, or you can check out the md-pages branch to read those documents offline.

Installing Python

Visit the Python Downloads page to learn how to install Python for your OS.

On OS X you can use the Apple provided Python 2.7 which is in /usr/bin or you can install a more recent version using the python.org installer. If using the latter, and you want to run the GYP tests or generate Ninja format projects on a Mac, you must install PyObjC, which is included in the Apple-provided Python. The easiest way is

pip install -u pyobjc

On Windows you can use either the native Windows version (recommended) or the version found in Cygwin. To run the GYP tests or generate Ninja format projects on Windows you must install the Python for Windows extensions.

If you install the native Windows version you must add <python> and <python>/Scripts to the PATH environment in Windows. <python> represents your actual install directory which defaults to C:\Python27.