Brent Fulgham wrote: > The thing that worries me about this latest push to add GYP is that > there was much Google enthusiasm for the SCons stuff six months or so > ago, and SCons stuff started landing in the tree, and now that's all > been tossed away (apparently for performance reasons). > > Do we feel that GYP is finally the right tool?
It's fair to say that it's always been the Chromium team's desire to move at least some chunk of our WebKit build system upstream into the WebKit repository. Conceptually, the instructions for building WebKit belong with WebKit. What you're seeing with Dimitri's recent checkin of .gypi files is a step in this direction. Given this, you're quite right to pick up on the "build system du jour" nature of the discussion. A year ago, the Chromium team was expecting SCons files to become the master description of our build, but for various reasons including performance, that didn't really work out. We were gung-ho about SCons, but our enthusiasm may have been premature: at least for Chromium, it turned out to not be the right solution right now. The difference between the SCons-driven and GYP-driven builds of Chromium is that with the latter, we really were able to unify our disparate build systems. With GYP, we've got a single build system instead of three (or four), and we were able to do that while meeting the other requirements peculiar to our project. GYP may just be another "build system du jour," but cette jour, it's actually carrying Chromium on all of its platforms. It's also important to keep in mind that as long as Chromium is using GYP for its build, we (the Chromium team) are committed to maintaining .gyp/.gypi files checked into the WebKit repository at least as well as they need to be maintained to support our use. Speaking as someone heavily involved with GYP's development, I'd be thrilled if it worked for other projects too; speaking as a Chromium team member, it'd be helpful if people working on other WebKit ports maintained the .gyp/.gypi files as they add, move, and remove files in the WebKit tree, even if no port other than Chromium is actually using GYP. To be honest, though, I don't think that WebKit (or any other project) should choose a build system hastily, and it's entirely conceivable that what works best for Chromium might not work best for WebKit. Mark _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@lists.webkit.org http://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/webkit-dev