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A Python-based build system that generates Ninja files

Project description

Pcons

A modern Python-based build system. Builds anything that requires a repeatable workflow using a dependency graph. Works with Ninja (or Makefile) to do the builds.

CI PyPI Python

Overview

Pcons is inspired by SCons and CMake, taking a few of the best ideas from each:

  • From SCons: Environments, Tools, dependency tracking, Python as the configuration language
  • From CMake: Generator architecture (configure once, build fast), usage requirements that propagate through dependencies

Key design principles:

  • Configuration, not execution: Pcons generates Ninja files; Ninja executes the build
  • Python is the language: No custom DSL—build scripts are real Python with full IDE support
  • Language-agnostic: Build C++, Rust, LaTeX, protobuf, or anything else
  • Explicit over implicit: Dependencies are discoverable and traceable
  • Extensible: Add-on modules for domain-specific tasks (plugin bundles, SDK configuration, etc.)

Why another software build tool?

I was one of the original developers of SCons, and helped maintain it for many years. I love that python is the config language; that makes build descriptions incredibly flexible and powerful. Recently I've been using CMake for more projects, and despite the deeply painful configuration language, I've come to appreciate its power: conan integration, the separation between describing the build and running it, and dependency propagation, among other things. I feel that SCons hasn't kept up with modern python; like any very widely used mature project, it has a lot of accumulated wisdom but also a bit ossified ways of doing things.

I've been thinking for years now about rearchitecting SCons onto a modern python stack with Path and decorators and all the other wonderful stuff python has been doing, and fixing some of the pain points at the same time (substitution/quoting, extensibility, tracing, separation between description and building, and more), but I've never had the time to dig into it. But recently as I've been using a lot more of Claude Code as a programming assistant, and it has gotten significantly better, it seemed like the right time to try this as a collaborative project. So, meet pcons!

Status

🚧 Under active development - ready for experimentation and feedback.

Core functionality is working: C/C++/Fortran compilation, static and shared libraries, programs, install targets, and mixed-language builds. See ARCHITECTURE.md for design details.

This Project is AI-Assisted

I've used Claude Code extensively to create this project, mostly Claude Opus 4.6. It has been a huge help in realizing a vision I've had for a long time. If you reflexively or morally reject all AI-generated or AI-assisted code, pcons is not for you. That said, I've reviewed every decision and nearly every line, and this code reflects my architecture, goals and priorities. I take full responsibility for it, and as a professional software engineer I stand behind it.

One of my sub-goals has been to make sure the documentation and source organization is clear; not just for humans but for browsing by AI agents. I want to make it easy for a human or an AI agent to create a best-practices pcons-build.py for your project quickly and easily. Using AI to auto-generate doc and make sure APIs are clean and consistent helps with that goal.

Quick Example

# pcons-build.py
from pcons.core.project import Project
from pcons.toolchains import find_c_toolchain

project = Project("myapp", build_dir="build")

# Find and configure a C/C++ toolchain
env = project.Environment(toolchain=find_c_toolchain())
env.cc.flags.extend(["-Wall"])

# Build a static library
lib = project.StaticLibrary("core", env)
lib.sources.append(project.node("src/core.c"))
lib.public.include_dirs.append(Path("include"))

# Build a program using it
app = project.Program("myapp", env)
app.sources.append(project.node("src/main.c"))
app.link(lib)

# Generate the ninja.build script
project.generate()
uvx pcons # generate ninja.build and run it, producing build/myapp (or build/myapp.exe)

Installation

No installation needed, if you have uv; just use uvx pcons to configure and build. uvx pcons --help for more info. If you want to install it, though:

# Install as a CLI tool (recommended)
uv tool install pcons
pcons ...

# Or add to a project's dependencies
uv add pcons

# Or with pip
pip install pcons

Documentation

Development

# Run tests
uv run pytest

# Run linter
make lint

# Format code
make fmt

# Or use uv directly
uv run ruff check pcons/
uv run mypy pcons/

License

MIT License - see LICENSE

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