4.3 KiB
gst-build
GStreamer meson based repositories aggregrator
You can build GStreamer and all its modules at once using meson and its subproject feature.
Getting started
Install meson and ninja
You should get meson through your package manager or using:
$ pip3 install --user meson
If you are building on Windows, do not use the Meson MSI installer since it is experimental and will likely not work.
You should get ninja
using your package manager or download the official
release and put it in your PATH.
Build GStreamer and its modules
You can get all GStreamer built running:
mkdir build/ && meson build && ninja -C build/
NOTE: on fedora (and maybe other distributions) replace ninja
with ninja-build
Development environment
Uninstalled environment
gst-build also contains a special uninstalled
target that lets you enter an
uninstalled development environment where you will be able to work on GStreamer
easily. You can get into that environment running:
ninja -C build/ uninstalled
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/
.
NOTE: In the uninstalled environment, a fully usable prefix is also configured
in gst-build/prefix
where you can install any extra dependency/project.
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
Custom subprojects
We also added a meson option, 'custom_subprojects', that allows the user 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
Run tests
You can easily run the test of all the components:
meson test -C build
To list all available tests:
meson test -C build --list
To run all the tests of a specific component:
meson test -C build --suite gst-plugins-base
Or to run a specific test file:
meson test -C build/ --suite gstreamer gst_gstbuffer
Run a specific test from a specific test file:
GST_CHECKS=test_subbuffer meson test -C build/ --suite gstreamer gst_gstbuffer
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.
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:
./checkout-branch-worktree ../gst-1.14 1.14 -C build/
Add information about GStreamer development environment in your prompt line
Bash prompt
We automatically handle bash
and set $PS1
accordingly
Zsh prompt
In your .zshrc
, you should add something like:
export PROMPT="$GST_ENV-$PROMPT"
Fish prompt
In your ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish
, you should add something like this at the end of the fish_prompt function body:
if set -q GST_ENV
echo -n -s (set_color -b blue white) "(" (basename "$GST_ENV") ")" (set_color normal) " "
end
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
},