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Source code dependency manager for C++

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-02 16:28 出处:网络
There are already some questions about dependency managers here, but it seems to me that they are mostly about build systems, while I am looking for 开发者_StackOverflowsomething targeted purely at ma

There are already some questions about dependency managers here, but it seems to me that they are mostly about build systems, while I am looking for 开发者_StackOverflowsomething targeted purely at making dependency tracking and resolution simpler (and I'm not necessarily interested in learning a new build system).

So, typically we have a project and some common code with another project. This common code is organized as a library, so when I want to get the latest code version for a project, I should also go get all the libraries from the source control. To do this, I need a list of dependencies. Then, to build the project I can reuse this list too.

I've looked at Maven and Ivy, but I'm not sure if they would be appropriate for C++, as they look quite heavily java-targeted (even though there might be plugins for C++, I haven't found people recommending them).

I see it as a GUI tool producing some standardized dependency list which can then be parsed by different scripts etc. It would be nice if it could integrate with source control (tag, get a tagged version with dependencies etc), but that's optional.

Would you have any suggestions? Maybe I'm just missing something, and usually it's done some other way with no need for such a tool? Thanks.


You can use Maven in relationship with C++ in two ways. First you can use it for dependency management of components between each other. Second you can use Maven-nar-plugin for creating shared libraries and unit tests in relationship with boost library (my experience). In the end you can create RPM's (maven-rpm-plugin) out of it to have adequate installation medium. Furthermore i have created the installation for CI environment via Maven (RPM's for Hudson, Nexus installation in RPM's).


I'm not sure if you would see an version control system (VCS) as build tool but Mercurial and Git support sub-repositories. In your case a sub-repository would be your dependencies:

  • Join multiple subrepos into one and preserve history in Mercurial
  • Multiple git repo in one project

Use your VCS to archive the build results -- needed anyway for maintenance -- and refer to the libs and header files in your build environment.

If you are looking for a reference take a look at https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest.

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