Scons. Go recursive with Glob

As Torsten already said, there is no "internal" recursive Glob() in SCons. You need to write something yourself. My solution is:

import fnmatch
import os

matches = []
for root, dirnames, filenames in os.walk('src'):
  for filename in fnmatch.filter(filenames, '*.c'):
    matches.append(Glob(os.path.join(root, filename)[len(root)+1:]))

I want to stress that you need Glob() here (not glob.glob() from python) especially when you use VariantDir(). Also when you use VariantDir() don't forget to convert absolute paths to relative (in the example I achieve this using [len(root)+1:]).


Sure. You need to write python wrappers to walking through dirs. You can find many recipes on stackoverflow. Here is my simple function which returns list of subdirs in present dir (and ignore hide dirs starting with '.' - dot)

def getSubdirs(abs_path_dir) :  
    lst = [ name for name in os.listdir(abs_path_dir) if os.path.isdir(os.path.join(abs_path_dir, name)) and name[0] != '.' ]
    lst.sort()
    return lst

For example, i've dir modules what containts foo, bar, ice.

corePath = 'abs/path/to/modules'
modules = getSubdirs(corePath)
# modules = [bar, foo, ice]
for module in modules :
  sources += Glob(os.path.join(corePath, module, '*.cpp'))

You can improve getSubdirs function adding recurse and walking deeper to subdirs.


The Glob() SCons function doesnt have the ability to go recursive.

It would be much more efficient if you change your Python code to use the list.extend() function, like this:

sources = Glob('./builds/Std/*/*.cpp')
sources.extend(Glob('./builds/Std/*.cpp'))
sources.extend(Glob('./builds/Std/*/*/*.cpp'))
sources.extend(Glob('./builds/Std/*/*/*/*.cpp'))

Instead of trying to go recursive like you are, its quite common to have a SConscript script in each subdirectory and in the root SConstruct call each of them with the SConscript() function. This is called a SCons hierarchical build.

Tags:

Scons