# Host Dependencies Tools used at build time by other ports to generate code or implement a custom build system can be packaged inside vcpkg. ## Consuming When consuming a port as a tool, you must set the dependency's `"host"` field to true. For example: ```json { "name": "contoso-http-library", "version-string": "1.0.0", "description": "Contoso's http runtime library", "dependencies": [ "contoso-core-library", { "name": "contoso-code-generator", "host": true }, { "name": "contoso-build-system", "host": true } ] } ``` In this case, the `contoso-code-generator` and `contoso-build-system` (including any transitive dependencies) will be built and installed for the host triplet before `contoso-http-library` is built. >Note: Consumers must use `vcpkg.json` instead of `CONTROL` as their metadata format. You can easily convert an existing `CONTROL` file using `vcpkg format-manifest /path/to/CONTROL`. Then, within the portfile of the consumer (`contoso-http-library` in the example), the CMake variable `CURRENT_HOST_INSTALLED_DIR` will be defined to `installed/` and should be used to locate any required assets. In the example, `contoso-code-generator` might have installed `tools/contoso-code-generator/ccg.exe` which the consumer would add to its local path via ```cmake # ports/contoso-http-library/portfile.cmake vcpkg_add_to_path(${CURRENT_HOST_INSTALLED_DIR}/tools/contoso-code-generator) ``` ## Specifying the Host Triplet The default host triplets are chosen based on the host architecture and operating system, for example `x64-windows`, `x64-linux`, or `x64-osx`. They can be overridden via: 1. In CMake-based manifest mode, calling `set(VCPKG_HOST_TRIPLET "" CACHE STRING "")` before the first `project()` directive 2. In MSBuild-based manifest mode, setting the `VcpkgHostTriplet` property 3. On the command line, via the flag `--host-triplet=...` 4. The `VCPKG_DEFAULT_HOST_TRIPLET` environment variable ## Producing Producing a tool has no special requirements; tools should be authored as a standard port, following all the normal policies and practices. Notably, they should build against `TARGET_TRIPLET`, not `HOST_TRIPLET` within the context of their portfile. Sometimes, it can be useful to determine whether the current context is a cross-compiling one or not. This should be done by comparing the strings `TARGET_TRIPLET` and `HOST_TRIPLET`. For example: ```cmake string(COMPARE EQUAL "${TARGET_TRIPLET}" "${HOST_TRIPLET}" I_AM_NOT_CROSSCOMPILING) if(TARGET_TRIPLET STREQUAL HOST_TRIPLET) # This is a native build else() # This is a cross build endif() ``` ## Host-only ports Some ports are host-only: script ports and tool ports are common examples. In this case, you can use the `"native"` supports expression to describe this. This supports expression is true when `TARGET_TRIPLET == HOST_TRIPLET`.