table of contents
PC(5) | File Formats Manual | PC(5) |
NAME¶
file.pc
—
pkg-config file format
DESCRIPTION¶
pkg-config files provide a useful mechanism for storing various
information about libraries and packages on a given system. Information
stored by .pc
files include compiler and linker
flags necessary to use a given library, as well as any other relevant
metadata.
These .pc
files are processed by a utility
called pkg-config
, of which
pkgconf
is an implementation.
FILE SYNTAX¶
The .pc
file follows a format inspired by
RFC822. Comments are prefixed by a pound sign, hash sign or octothorpe (#),
and variable assignment is similar to POSIX shell. Properties are defined
using RFC822-style stanzas.
VARIABLES¶
Variable definitions start with an alphanumeric string, followed by an equal sign, and then the value the variable should contain.
Variable references are always written as "${variable}". It is possible to escape literal "${" as "$${".
PROPERTIES¶
Properties are set using RFC822-style stanzas which consist of a keyword, followed by a colon (:) and then the value the property should be set to. Variable substitution is always performed regardless of property type.
There are three types of property:
- Literal
- The property will be set to the text of the value.
- Dependency List
- The property will be set to a list of dependencies parsed from the text.
Dependency lists are defined by this ABNF syntax:
package-list = *WSP *( package-spec *( package-sep ) ) package-sep = WSP / "," package-spec = package-key [ ver-op package-version ] ver-op = "<" / "<=" / "=" / "!=" / ">=" / ">"
- Fragment List
- The property will be set to a list of fragments parsed from the text. The input text must be in a format that is suitable for passing to a POSIX shell without any shell expansions after variable substitution has been done.
PROPERTY KEYWORDS¶
- Name
- The displayed name of the package. (mandatory; literal)
- Version
- The version of the package. (mandatory; literal)
- Description
- A description of the package. (mandatory; literal)
- URL
- A URL to a webpage for the package. This is used to recommend where newer versions of the package can be acquired. (mandatory; literal)
- Cflags
- Required compiler flags. These flags are always used, regardless of whether static compilation is requested. (optional; fragment list)
- Cflags.private
- Required compiler flags for static compilation. (optional; fragment list; pkgconf extension)
- Libs
- Required linking flags for this package. Libraries this package depends on for linking against it, which are not described as dependencies should be specified here. (optional; fragment list)
- Libs.private
- Required linking flags for this package that are only required when linking statically. Libraries this package depends on for linking against it statically, which are not described as dependencies should be specified here. (optional; fragment list)
- Requires
- Required dependencies that must be met for the package to be usable. All dependencies must be satisfied or the pkg-config implementation must not use the package. (optional; dependency list)
- Requires.private
- Required dependencies that must be met for the package to be usable for static linking. All dependencies must be satisfied or the pkg-config implementation must not use the package for static linking. (optional; dependency list)
- Conflicts
- Dependencies that must not be met for the package to be usable. If any package in the proposed dependency solution match any dependency in the Conflicts list, the package being considered is not usable. (optional; dependency list)
- Provides
- Dependencies that may be provided by an alternate package. If a package cannot be found, the entire package collection is scanned for providers which can match the requested dependency. (optional; dependency list; pkgconf extension)
EXTENSIONS¶
Features that have been marked as a pkgconf extension are only guaranteed to work with the pkgconf implementation of pkg-config. Other implementations may or may not support the extensions.
Accordingly, it is suggested that .pc
files which absolutely depend on these extensions declare a requirement on
the pkgconf virtual.
EXAMPLES¶
An example .pc file:
# This is a comment prefix=/home/kaniini/pkg # this defines a variable exec_prefix=${prefix} # defining another variable with a substitution libdir=${exec_prefix}/lib includedir=${prefix}/include Name: libfoo # human-readable name Description: an example library called libfoo # human-readable description Version: 1.0 URL: http://www.pkgconf.org Requires: libbar > 2.0.0 Conflicts: libbaz <= 3.0.0 Libs: -L${libdir} -lfoo Libs.private: -lm Cflags: -I${includedir}/libfoo
SEE ALSO¶
December 15, 2017 | Linux 5.14.0-427.18.1.el9_4.x86_64 |