Compiler selection and customizing a build#

Selecting a specific compiler#

Meson supports the standard environment variables CC, CXX and FC to select specific C, C++ and/or Fortran compilers. These environment variables are documented in the reference tables in the Meson docs.

Note that environment variables only get applied from a clean build, because they affect the configure stage (i.e., meson setup). An incremental rebuild does not react to changes in environment variables - you have to run git clean -xdf and do a full rebuild, or run meson setup --reconfigure.

Adding a custom compiler or linker flag#

Meson by design prefers builds being configured through command-line options passed to meson setup. It provides many built-in options:

  • For enabling a debug build and the optimization level, see the next section on “build types”,

  • Enabling -Werror in a portable manner is done via -Dwerror=true,

  • Enabling warning levels is done via -Dwarning_level=<val>, with <val> one of {0, 1, 2, 3, everything},

  • There are many other builtin options, from activating Visual Studio (-Dvsenv=true) and building with link time optimization (-Db_lto) to changing the default C++ language level (-Dcpp_std='c++17') or linker flags (-Dcpp_link_args='-Wl,-z,defs').

For a comprehensive overview of options, see Meson’s builtin options docs page.

Meson also supports the standard environment variables CFLAGS, CXXFLAGS, FFLAGS and LDFLAGS to inject extra flags - with the same caveat as in the previous section about those environment variables being picked up only for a clean build and not an incremental build.

Using different build types with Meson#

Meson provides different build types while configuring the project. You can see the available options for build types in the “core options” section of the Meson documentation.

Assuming that you are building from scratch (do git clean -xdf if needed), you can configure the build as following to use the debug build type:

spin build -- -Dbuildtype=debug

Now, you can use the spin interface for further building, installing and testing NumPy as normal:

spin test -s linalg

This will work because after initial configuration, Meson will remember the config options.

Controlling build parallelism#

By default, ninja will launch 2*n_cpu + 2, with n_cpu the number of physical CPU cores, parallel build jobs. This is fine in the vast majority of cases, and results in close to optimal build times. In some cases, on machines with a small amount of RAM relative to the number of CPU cores, this leads to a job running out of memory. In case that happens, lower the number of jobs N such that you have at least 2 GB RAM per job. For example, to launch 6 jobs:

python -m pip install . -Ccompile-args="-j6"

or:

spin build -j6