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# gst-build
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GStreamer [meson ](http://mesonbuild.com/ ) based repositories aggregrator.
Check out this module and run meson on it, and it will git clone the other
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GStreamer modules as [meson subprojects ](http://mesonbuild.com/Subprojects.html )
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and build everything in one go. Once that is done you can switch into an
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development environment which allows you to easily develop and test the latest
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version of GStreamer without the need to install anything or touch an existing
GStreamer system installation.
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## Getting started
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### Install git and python 3.5+
If you're on Linux, you probably already have these. On macOS, you can use the
[official Python installer ](https://www.python.org/downloads/mac-osx/ ).
You can find [instructions for Windows below ](#windows-prerequisites-setup ).
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### Install meson and ninja
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Meson 0.48 or newer is required.
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On Linux and macOS you can get meson through your package manager or using:
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$ pip3 install --user meson
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This will install meson into `~/.local/bin` which may or may not be included
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automatically in your PATH by default.
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You should get `ninja` using your package manager or download the [official
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release](https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases) and put the `ninja`
binary in your PATH.
You can find [instructions for Windows below ](#windows-prerequisites-setup ).
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### Build GStreamer and its modules
You can get all GStreamer built running:
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```
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meson build/
ninja -C build/
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```
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This will automatically create the `build` directory and build everything
inside it.
NOTE: On Windows, you *must* run this from inside the Visual Studio command
prompt of the appropriate architecture and version.
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# Development environment
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## Building the Qt5 QML plugin
If `qmake` is not in `PATH` and pkgconfig files are not available, you can
point the `QMAKE` env var to the Qt5 installation of your choosing before
running `meson` as shown above.
The plugin will be automatically enabled if possible, but you can ensure that
it is built by passing `-Dgst-plugins-good:qt5=enabled` to `meson` . This will
cause Meson to error out if the plugin could not be enabled. This also works
for all plugins in all GStreamer repositories.
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## Development environment target
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gst-build also contains a special `devenv` target that lets you enter an
development environment where you will be able to work on GStreamer
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easily. You can get into that environment running:
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```
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ninja -C build/ devenv
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```
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If your operating system handles symlinks, built modules source code will be
available at the root of `gst-build/` for example GStreamer core will be in
`gstreamer/` . Otherwise they will be present in `subprojects/` . You can simply
hack in there and to rebuild you just need to rerun `ninja -C build/` .
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NOTE: In the development environment, a fully usable prefix is also configured
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in `gst-build/prefix` where you can install any extra dependency/project.
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An external script can be run in development environment with:
```
./gst-env.py external_script.sh
```
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## Update git subprojects
We added a special `update` target to update subprojects (it uses `git pull
--rebase` meaning you should always make sure the branches you work on are
following the right upstream branch, you can set it with `git branch
--set-upstream-to origin/master` if you are working on `gst-build` master
branch).
Update all GStreamer modules and rebuild:
```
ninja -C build/ update
```
Update all GStreamer modules without rebuilding:
```
ninja -C build/ git-update
```
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## Custom subprojects
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We also added a meson option, `custom_subprojects` , that allows the user
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to provide a comma-separated list of subprojects that should be built
alongside the default ones.
To use it:
```
cd subprojects
git clone my_subproject
cd ../build
rm -rf * & & meson .. -Dcustom_subprojects=my_subproject
ninja
```
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## Run tests
You can easily run the test of all the components:
```
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meson test -C build
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```
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To list all available tests:
```
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meson test -C build --list
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```
To run all the tests of a specific component:
```
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meson test -C build --suite gst-plugins-base
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```
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Or to run a specific test file:
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```
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meson test -C build/ --suite gstreamer gst_gstbuffer
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```
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Run a specific test from a specific test file:
```
GST_CHECKS=test_subbuffer meson test -C build/ --suite gstreamer gst_gstbuffer
```
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## Optional Installation
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`gst-build` has been created primarily for [development usage ](#development-environment-target ),
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but you can also install everything that is built into a predetermined prefix like so:
```
meson --prefix=/path/to/install/prefix build/
ninja -C build/
meson install -C build/
```
Note that the installed files have `RPATH` stripped, so you will need to set
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` , `DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH` , or `PATH` as appropriate for your
platform for things to work.
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## Checkout another branch using worktrees
If you need to have several versions of GStreamer coexisting (eg. `master` and `1.14` ),
you can use the `checkout-branch-worktree` script provided by `gst-build` . It allows you
to create a new `gst-build` environment with new checkout of all the GStreamer modules as
[git worktrees ](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-worktree ).
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For example to get a fresh checkout of `gst-1.14` from a `gst-build` in master **already
built** in a `build` directory you can simply run:
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```
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./checkout-branch-worktree ../gst-build-1.14 origin/1.14 -C build/
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```
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This will create a new ``gst-build-1.14`` folder at the same level of ``gst-build`` pointing to the given branch ie *1.14*
for all the subprojects ( gstreamer, gst-plugins-base etc.)
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## Add information about GStreamer development environment in your prompt line
### Bash prompt
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We automatically handle `bash` and set `$PS1` accordingly.
If the automatic `$PS1` override is not desired (maybe you have a fancy custom prompt), set the `$GST_BUILD_DISABLE_PS1_OVERRIDE` environment variable to `TRUE` and use `$GST_ENV` when setting the custom prompt, for example with a snippet like the following:
```bash
...
if [[ -n "${GST_ENV-}" ]];
then
PS1+="[ ${GST_ENV} ]"
fi
...
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```
### Using powerline
In your powerline theme configuration file (by default in
`{POWERLINE INSTALLATION DIR}/config_files/themes/shell/default.json` )
you should add a new environment segment as follow:
```
{
"function": "powerline.segments.common.env.environment",
"args": { "variable": "GST_ENV" },
"priority": 50
},
```
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## Windows Prerequisites Setup
On Windows, some of the components may require special care.
### Git for Windows
Use the [Git for Windows ](https://gitforwindows.org/ ) installer. It will
install a `bash` prompt with basic shell utils and up-to-date git binaries.
During installation, when prompted about `PATH` , you should select the
following option:
![Select "Git from the command line and also from 3rd-party software" ](/data/images/git-installer-PATH.png )
### Python 3.5+ on Windows
Use the [official Python installer ](https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/ ).
You must ensure that Python is installed into `PATH` :
![Enable Add Python to PATH, then click Customize Installation ](/data/images/py-installer-page1.png )
You may also want to customize the installation and install it into
a system-wide location such as `C:\PythonXY` , but this is not required.
### Ninja on Windows
The easiest way to install Ninja on Windows is with `pip3` , which will download
the compiled binary and place it into the `Scripts` directory inside your
Python installation:
```
pip3 install ninja
```
You can also download the [official release ](https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases )
and place it into `PATH` .
### Meson on Windows
**IMPORTANT**: Do not use the Meson MSI installer since it is experimental and known to not
work with `gst-build` .
You can use `pip3` to install Meson, same as Ninja above:
```
pip3 install meson
```
Note that Meson is written entirely in Python, so you can also run it as-is
from the [git repository ](https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/ ) if you want to
use the latest master branch for some reason.
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### Setup a mingw/wine based development environment on linux
#### Install wine and mingw
##### On fedora x64
``` sh
sudo dnf install mingw64-gcc mingw64-gcc-c++ mingw64-pkg-config mingw64-winpthreads wine
```
FIXME: Figure out what needs to be installed on other distros
#### Get meson from git
This simplifies the process and allows us to use the cross files
defined in meson itself.
``` sh
git clone https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson.git
```
#### Build and install
```
BUILDDIR=$PWD/winebuild/
export WINEPREFIX=$BUILDDIR/wine-prefix/ & & mkdir -p $WINEPREFIX
# Setting the prefix is mandatory as it is used to setup symlinks during uninstalled development
meson/meson.py $BUILDDIR --cross-file meson/cross/linux-mingw-w64-64bit.txt -Dgst-plugins-bad:vulkan=disabled -Dorc:gtk_doc=disabled --prefix=$BUILDDIR/wininstall/ -Djson-glib:gtk_doc=disabled
meson/meson.py install -C $BUILDDIR/
```
> __NOTE__: You should use `meson install -C $BUILDDIR` each time you make a change
> instead of the usual `ninja -C build` as the environment is not uninstalled.
#### The development environment
You can get into the development environment the usual way:
```
ninja -C $BUILDDIR/ devenv
```
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Alternatively, if you'd rather not start a shell in your workflow, you
can mutate the current environment into a suitable state like so:
```
gst-env.py --only-environment
```
This will print output suitable for an sh-compatible `eval` function,
just like `ssh-agent -s` .
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After setting up [binfmt] to use wine for windows binaries,
you can run GStreamer tools under wine by running:
```
gst-launch-1.0.exe videotestsrc ! glimagesink
```
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[binfmt]: http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/binfmt.d.5.html