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.github | ||
building | ||
dist | ||
src | ||
.eslintrc.json | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.npmrc | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.terserrc.js | ||
LICENSE.dependencies.txt | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
README.md | ||
action.yml | ||
jest.config.js | ||
package.json | ||
pnpm-lock.yaml | ||
pnpm-workspace.yaml | ||
tsconfig.json |
README.md
setup-cpp
Install all the tools required for building and testing C++/C projects.
Setting up a cross-platform environment for building and testing C++/C projects is a bit tricky. Each platform has its own compilers, and each of them requires a different installation procedure. This package aims to fix this issue.
This package is designed to be modular and as minimal as possible. This will allow you to install the tools you want. It is continuously tested on Windows, Linux, and macOS.
The package can be used locally or from CI services like GitHub Actions. Stay tuned for the stable release.
Features
setup-cpp
can install all of these tools:
- llvm
- gcc
- cmake
- ninja
- meson
- conan
- ccache
- cppcheck
- doxygen
- gcovr
- opencppcoverage
- python
- choco
- brew
Usage
From Terminal
You should download the exe file or the js file (if have Nodejs installed), and run it with the available options.
Tip: You can automate downloading using wget
, curl
or other similar tools.
Executable
Download the executable for your platform from here, and run it with the available options.
An example that installs llvm, cmake, ninja, ccache, and conan:
# windows example (open shell as admin)
curl -O "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_cpp_windows.exe"
./setup_cpp_windows --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
# linux example
wget "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_cpp_linux"
chmod +x setup_cpp_linux
sudo ./setup_cpp_linux --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
# mac example
wget "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_mac_linux"
chmod +x setup_cpp_mac
sudo ./setup_cpp_mac --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
NOTE: In the compiler
entry, you can specify the version after -
like llvm-11
.
For the tools, instead of true
, which chooses the default version, you can pass a specific version.
With Nodejs
Download the setup_cpp.js
file form here, and run it with the available options.
On Windows
# open shell as admin
wget "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_cpp_windows.exe"
node ./setup_cpp.js --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
On Linux or Mac:
wget "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_cpp.js"
sudo node ./setup_cpp.js --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
Inside GitHub Actions
Here is a complete cross-platform example that tests llvm and gcc. It also uses cmake, ninja, conan, cppcheck, and ccache.
.github/workflows/ci.yml
:
name: ci
on:
pull_request:
push:
branches:
- main
- master
jobs:
Test:
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
os:
- windows-2019
- ubuntu-20.04
- macos-10.15
compiler:
- llvm
- gcc
# you can specify the version after `-` like `llvm-11`.
steps:
- name: Setup Cpp
uses: aminya/setup-cpp@v1
with:
compiler: ${{ matrix.compiler }}
cmake: true
ninja: true
conan: true
cppcheck: true
ccache: true # instead of `true`, which chooses the default version, you can pass a specific version.
# add any tool that you need here...
Inside Docker
Here is an example for using setup_cpp to make a builder image that has the cpp tools you need.
# debian
FROM debian:bullseye
# add setup_cpp
WORKDIR "/"
RUN wget "https://github.com/aminya/setup-cpp/releases/download/v0.2/setup_cpp_linux"
RUN chmod +x ./setup_cpp_linux
# install llvm, cmake, ninja, ccache, and conan
RUN ./setup_cpp --compiler llvm --cmake true --ninja true --ccache true --conan true
ENTRYPOINT [ "/bin/bash" ]
See this folder, for some dockerfile examples.
If you want to build the ones included, then run:
docker build -f ./building/docker/debian.dockerfile -t setup_cpp .
After -f
use the docker file name.
Incomplete
- msvc. It is implemented, but has bugs. See this issue
- vcpkg (TODO)