Monday, September 24, 2018

Directory structure for a C++ library



I am working on a C++ library. Ultimately, I would like to make it publicly available for multiple platforms (Linux and Windows at least), along with some examples and Python bindings. Work is progressing nicely, but at the moment the project is quite messy, built solely in and for Visual C++ and not multi-platform at all.



Therefore, I feel a cleanup is in order. The first thing I'd like to improve is the project's directory structure. I'd like to create a structure that is suitable for the Automake tools to allow easy compilation on multiple platforms, but I've never used these before. Since I'll still be doing (most of the) coding in Visual Studio, I'll need somewhere to keep my Visual Studio project and solution files as well.



I tried to google for terms like "C++ library directory structure", but nothing useful seems to come up. I found some very basic guidelines, but no crystal clear solutions.



While looking at some open source libraries, I came up with the following:




\mylib
\mylib
\include? or just mix .cpp and .h
\bin
\python
\lib
\projects
\include?
README

AUTHORS
...


I have no/little previous experience with multi-platform development/open source projects and am quite amazed that I cannot find any good guidelines on how to structure such a project.



How should one generally structure such a library project? What ca be recommended to read? Are there some good examples?


Answer



One thing that's very common among Unix libraries is that they are organized such that:




./         Makefile and configure scripts.
./src General sources
./include Header files that expose the public interface and are to be installed
./lib Library build directory
./bin Tools build directory
./tools Tools sources
./test Test suites that should be run during a `make test`


It somewhat reflects the traditional Unix filesystem under /usr where:




/usr/src      Sometimes contains sources for installed programs
/usr/include Default include directory
/usr/lib Standard library install path
/usr/share/projectname Contains files specific to the project.


Of course, these may end up in /usr/local (which is the default install prefix for GNU autoconf), and they may not adhere to this structure at all.



There's no hard-and-fast rule. I personally don't organize things this way. (I avoid using a ./src/ directory at all except for the largest projects, for example. I also don't use autotools, preferring instead CMake.)




My suggestion to you is that you should choose a directory layout that makes sense for you (and your team). Do whatever is most sensible for your chosen development environment, build tools, and source control.


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