Configuration

Configuration files can provide additional metadata for packages as well as define default command line arguments. All files described below are using the YAML format. Note that all strings are case sensitive.

colcon.pkg files

A colcon.pkg file must be placed in the root directory of a package.

The first level of the configuration file is a dictionary. The key can contain any of the following:

  • name (string) to declare the package name
  • type (string) to explicitly declare which colcon extension should process the package.
  • dependencies (list of strings) to declare additional dependencies on other packages. For more fine grain control it is also possible to set build-dependencies, run-dependencies, and test-dependencies.
  • hooks (list of relative paths within the install prefix) to declare additional scripts to be sourced.
  • Any command line argument. The leading single or double dash must be omitted.

Values for command line arguments

The value type depends on the kind of command line argument:

  • For flags which are not followed by a value the value can be either true or false.
  • For options followed by a single decimal / float the value must be a decimal / float.
  • For options followed by a single value the value must be a string.
  • For options followed by one or more values the value must be a list where each item can be any of the mentioned types.

An example declaring an environment hook which should be sourced for a package:

{
    "hooks": ["share/pkgname/hook/something.sh"]
}

.meta files

The first level of the configuration file is a dictionary. The only two supported keys are:

  • names to provide settings based on the package name.
  • paths to provide settings based on the package path.

By package name

Note

Providing metadata based on the package name only works if the package can be identified and the name can be determined. Otherwise using a colcon.pkg file or the By package path configuration is necessary.

The value under the names key is again a dictionary.

The key is the name of the package. The value can contain the same package specific settings as described in the colcon.pkg files section above. The only exception is that specifying a package name is not supported.

By package path

The value under the paths key is again a dictionary.

The key is the path of the package. It can be either absolute or relative to the .meta file. The value can contain the same package specific settings as described in the colcon.pkg files section above. This can be used if the package name can’t be determined automatically and placing a colcon.pkg file into the package directory is undesired.

Package specific configuration

The package specific part under the package name or package path has the same content as the package specific configuration files described in the colcon.pkg files section above.

Using .meta files

Some configuration files are being picked up by default. The following are a few examples (see e.g. colcon build --help):

  • When --ignore-user-meta is not passed any file ending with .meta in any recursive subdirectory of $COLCON_HOME/metadata is being used.
  • When --metas is not passed and a file ./colcon.meta exists it is being used.
  • Any file passed with --metas <path/to/file> is being used.

Note

The default value for the environment variable COLCON_HOME is pointing to the directory .colcon within the users home directory.

defaults.yaml

If the configuration file $COLCON_HOME/defaults.yaml exists it is used to customize the default behavior of the CLI. The location can also be modified using the environment variable COLCON_DEFAULTS_FILE (see colcon --help).

The first level of the configuration file is a dictionary. The key is the verb name. In the case of more than one nested verbs the key is the names separated by dots. To specify configuration options before the first verb use an empty string key. The value is another dictionary containing the verb specific configuration.

Verb specific configuration

The key can contain any command line argument. The leading single or double dash must be omitted. The value type depends on the command line argument as mentioned in the Values for command line arguments section above.

An example to use the symlink install option by default:

{
    "build": {
        "symlink-install": true
    }
}