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318 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
318 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Manifest Mode
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**The latest version of this documentation is available on [GitHub](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg/tree/master/docs/users/manifests.md).**
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vcpkg has two modes of consuming dependencies - classic mode and manifest mode.
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In classic mode, vcpkg produces an "installed" tree, whose contents are changed by explicit calls to `vcpkg install` or
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`vcpkg remove`. The installed tree is intended for consumption by any number of projects: for example, installing a
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bunch of libraries and then using those libraries from Visual Studio, without additional configuration. Because the
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installed tree is not associated with an individual project, it's similar to tools like `brew` or `apt`, except that the
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installed tree is vcpkg-installation-local, rather than global to a system or user.
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In manifest mode, an installed tree is associated with a particular project rather than the vcpkg installation. The set
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of installed ports is controlled by editing the project's "manifest file", and the installed tree is placed in the
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project directory or build directory. This mode acts more similarly to language package managers like Cargo, or npm. We
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recommend using this manifest mode whenever possible, because it allows one to encode a project's dependencies
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explicitly in a project file, rather than in the documentation, making your project much easier to consume.
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Check out the [manifest cmake example](../examples/manifest-mode-cmake.md) for an example project using CMake and
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manifest mode.
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## Table of Contents
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- [Simple Example Manifest](#simple-example-manifest)
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- [Manifest Syntax Reference](#manifest-syntax-reference)
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- [`"name"`](#name)
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- [Version Fields](#version-fields)
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- [`"description"`](#description)
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- [`"builtin-baseline"`](#builtin-baseline)
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- [`"dependencies"`](#dependencies)
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- [`"name"`](#dependencies-name)
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- [`"default-features"`](#dependencies-default-features)
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- [`"features"`](#dependencies-features)
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- [`"platform"`](#platform)
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- [`"version>="`](#version-gt)
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- [`"overrides"`](#overrides)
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- [`"supports"`](#supports)
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- [`"features"`](#features)
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- [`"default-features"`](#default-features)
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See also [the original specification](../specifications/manifests.md) for more low-level details.
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## Simple Example Manifest
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```json
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{
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"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/microsoft/vcpkg/master/scripts/vcpkg.schema.json",
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"name": "my-application",
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"version": "0.15.2",
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"dependencies": [
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"boost-system",
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{
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"name": "cpprestsdk",
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"default-features": false
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},
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"libxml2",
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"yajl"
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]
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}
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```
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## Manifest Syntax Reference
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A manifest is a JSON-formatted file named `vcpkg.json` which lies at the root of your project.
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It contains all the information a person needs to know to get dependencies for your project,
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as well as all the metadata about your project that a person who depends on you might be interested in.
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Manifests follow strict JSON: they can't contain C++-style comments (`//`) nor trailing commas. However
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you can use field names that start with `$` to write your comments in any object that has a well-defined set of keys.
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These comment fields are not allowed in any objects which permit user-defined keys (such as `"features"`).
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Each manifest contains a top level object with the fields documented below; the most important ones are
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[`"name"`](#name), the [version fields](#version-fields), and [`"dependencies"`](#dependencies):
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<a id="name"></a>
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### `"name"`
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This is the name of your project! It must be formatted in a way that vcpkg understands - in other words,
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it must be lowercase alphabetic characters, digits, and hyphens, and it must not start nor end with a hyphen.
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For example, `Boost.Asio` might be given the name `boost-asio`.
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This is a required field.
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### Version Fields
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There are four version field options, depending on how the port orders its
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releases.
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* [`"version"`](versioning.md#version) - Generic, dot-separated numeric
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sequence.
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* [`"version-semver"`](versioning.md#version-semver) - [Semantic Version
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2.0.0](https://semver.org/#semantic-versioning-specification-semver)
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* [`"version-date"`](versioning.md#version-date) - Used for packages which do
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not have numeric releases (for example, Live-at-HEAD). Matches `YYYY-MM-DD`
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with optional trailing dot-separated numeric sequence.
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* [`"version-string"`](versioning.md#version-string) - Used for packages that
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don't have orderable versions. This should be rarely used, however all ports
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created before the other version fields were introduced use this scheme.
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Additionally, the optional `"port-version"` field is used to indicate revisions
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to the port with the same upstream source version. For pure consumers, this
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field should not be used.
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See [versioning](versioning.md#version-schemes) for more details.
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<a id="description"></a>
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### `"description"`
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This is where you describe your project. Give it a good description to help in searching for it!
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This can be a single string, or it can be an array of strings;
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in the latter case, the first string is treated as a summary,
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while the remaining strings are treated as the full description.
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<a id="builtin-baseline"></a>
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### `"builtin-baseline"`
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This field indicates the commit of vcpkg which provides global minimum version
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information for your manifest.
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It is required for top-level manifest files using versioning without a specified [`"default-registry"`](registries.md#configuration-default-registry). It has the same semantic as defining your default registry to be:
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```json
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{
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"default-registry": {
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"kind": "builtin",
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"baseline": "<value>"
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}
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}
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```
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See [versioning](versioning.md#baselines) for more semantic details.
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<a id="dependencies"></a>
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### `"dependencies"`
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This field lists all the dependencies you'll need to build your library (as well as any your dependents might need,
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if they were to use you). It's an array of strings and objects:
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* A string dependency (e.g., `"dependencies": [ "zlib" ]`) is the simplest way one can depend on a library;
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it means you don't depend on a single version, and don't need to write down any more information.
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* On the other hand, an object dependency (e.g., `"dependencies": [ { "name": "zlib" } ]`)
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allows you to add that extra information.
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#### Example:
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```json
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"dependencies": [
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{
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"name": "arrow",
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"default-features": false,
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"features": [ "json" ]
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},
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"boost-asio",
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"openssl",
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{
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"name": "picosha2",
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"platform": "!windows"
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}
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]
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```
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<a id="dependencies-name"></a>
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#### `"name"` Field
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The name of the dependency. This follows the same restrictions as the [`"name"`](#name) property for a project.
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<a id="dependencies-default-features"></a>
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<a id="dependencies-features"></a>
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#### `"features"` and `"default-features"` Fields
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`"features"` is an array of feature names which tell you the set of features that the
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dependencies need to have at a minimum,
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while `"default-features"` is a boolean that tells vcpkg whether or not to
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install the features the package author thinks should be "most common for most people to use".
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For example, `ffmpeg` is a library which supports many, many audio and video codecs;
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however, for your specific project, you may only need mp3 encoding.
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Then, you might just ask for:
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```json
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{
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"name": "ffmpeg",
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"default-features": false,
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"features": [ "mp3lame" ]
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}
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```
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<a id="platform"></a>
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#### `"platform"` Field
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The `"platform"` field defines the platforms where the dependency should be installed - for example,
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you might need to use sha256, and so you use platform primitives on Windows, but `picosha2` on non-Windows platforms.
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```json
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{
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"name": "picosha2",
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"platform": "!windows"
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}
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```
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This is a string field which takes boolean expressions of the form `<identifier>`,
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`!expression`, `expression { & expression & expression...}`, and `expression { | expression | expression...}`,
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along with parentheses to denote precedence.
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For example, a dependency that's only installed on the Windows OS, for the ARM64 architecture,
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and on Linux on x64, would be written `(windows & arm64) | (linux & x64)`.
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The common identifiers are:
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- The operating system: `windows`, `uwp`, `linux`, `osx` (includes macOS), `android`, `emscripten`
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- The architecture: `x86`, `x64`, `wasm32`, `arm64`, `arm` (includes both arm32 and arm64 due to backwards compatibility)
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although one can define their own.
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<a id="version-gt"></a>
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#### `"version>="` Field
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A minimum version constraint on the dependency.
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This field specifies the minimum version of the dependency, optionally using a
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`#N` suffix to denote port-version if non-zero.
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See also [versioning](versioning.md#version-1) for more semantic details.
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<a id="overrides"></a>
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### `"overrides"`
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This field pins exact versions for individual dependencies.
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`"overrides"` from transitive manifests (i.e. from dependencies) are ignored.
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See also [versioning](versioning.md#overrides) for more semantic details.
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#### Example:
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```json
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"overrides": [
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{
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"name": "arrow", "version": "1.2.3", "port-version": 7
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}
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]
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```
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<a id="supports"></a>
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### `"supports"`
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If your project doesn't support common platforms, you can tell your users this with the `"supports"` field.
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It uses the same platform expressions as [`"platform"`](#platform), from dependencies, as well as the
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`"supports"` field of features.
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For example, if your library doesn't support linux, you might write `{ "supports": "!linux" }`.
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<a id="default-features"></a>
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<a id="features"></a>
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### `"features"` and `"default-features"`
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The `"features"` field defines _your_ project's optional features, that others may either depend on or not.
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It's an object, where the keys are the names of the features, and the values are objects describing the feature.
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`"description"` is required,
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and acts exactly like the [`"description"`](#description) field on the global package,
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and `"dependencies"` are optional,
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and again act exactly like the [`"dependencies"`](#dependencies) field on the global package.
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There's also the `"supports"` field,
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which again acts exactly like the [`"supports"`](#supports) field on the global package.
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You also have control over which features are default, if a person doesn't ask for anything specific,
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and that's the `"default-features"` field, which is an array of feature names.
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#### Example:
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```json
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{
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"name": "libdb",
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"version": "1.0.0",
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"description": [
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"An example database library.",
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"Optionally can build with CBOR, JSON, or CSV as backends."
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],
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"$default-features-explanation": "Users using this library transitively will get all backends automatically",
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"default-features": [ "cbor", "csv", "json" ],
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"features": {
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"cbor": {
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"description": "The CBOR backend",
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"dependencies": [
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{
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"$explanation": [
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"This is how you tell vcpkg that the cbor feature depends on the json feature of this package"
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],
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"name": "libdb",
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"default-features": false,
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"features": [ "json" ]
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}
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]
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},
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"csv": {
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"description": "The CSV backend",
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"dependencies": [
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"fast-cpp-csv-parser"
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]
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},
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"json": {
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"description": "The JSON backend",
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"dependencies": [
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"jsoncons"
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]
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}
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}
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}
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```
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