Provided by: cmake-data_3.16.3-1ubuntu1.20.04.1_all 

NAME
cmake-commands - CMake Language Command Reference
SCRIPTING COMMANDS
These commands are always available.
break
Break from an enclosing foreach or while loop.
break()
Breaks from an enclosing foreach() or while() loop.
See also the continue() command.
cmake_host_system_information
Query host system specific information.
cmake_host_system_information(RESULT <variable> QUERY <key> ...)
Queries system information of the host system on which cmake runs. One or more <key> can be provided to
select the information to be queried. The list of queried values is stored in <variable>.
<key> can be one of the following values:
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Key Description
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
NUMBER_OF_LOGICAL_CORES Number of logical cores
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
NUMBER_OF_PHYSICAL_CORES Number of physical cores
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HOSTNAME Hostname
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
FQDN Fully qualified domain name
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
TOTAL_VIRTUAL_MEMORY Total virtual memory in MiB [1]
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
AVAILABLE_VIRTUAL_MEMORY Available virtual memory in MiB [1]
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
TOTAL_PHYSICAL_MEMORY Total physical memory in MiB [1]
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
AVAILABLE_PHYSICAL_MEMORY Available physical memory in MiB [1]
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
IS_64BIT One if processor is 64Bit
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_FPU One if processor has floating point
unit
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_MMX One if processor supports MMX
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_MMX_PLUS One if processor supports Ext. MMX
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_SSE One if processor supports SSE
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_SSE2 One if processor supports SSE2
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_SSE_FP One if processor supports SSE FP
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_SSE_MMX One if processor supports SSE MMX
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_AMD_3DNOW One if processor supports 3DNow
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_AMD_3DNOW_PLUS One if processor supports 3DNow+
instructions
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_IA64 One if IA64 processor emulating x86
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
HAS_SERIAL_NUMBER One if processor has serial number
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
PROCESSOR_SERIAL_NUMBER Processor serial number
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
PROCESSOR_NAME Human readable processor name
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
PROCESSOR_DESCRIPTION Human readable full processor
description
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
OS_NAME See CMAKE_HOST_SYSTEM_NAME
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
OS_RELEASE The OS sub-type e.g. on Windows
Professional
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
OS_VERSION The OS build ID
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
OS_PLATFORM See CMAKE_HOST_SYSTEM_PROCESSOR
┌───────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────────┐
│ │ │
FOOTNOTES
[1] One MiB (mebibyte) is equal to 1024x1024 bytes.
cmake_minimum_required
Require a minimum version of cmake.
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION <min>[...<max>] [FATAL_ERROR])
Sets the minimum required version of cmake for a project. Also updates the policy settings as explained
below.
<min> and the optional <max> are each CMake versions of the form major.minor[.patch[.tweak]], and the ...
is literal.
If the running version of CMake is lower than the <min> required version it will stop processing the
project and report an error. The optional <max> version, if specified, must be at least the <min>
version and affects policy settings as described below. If the running version of CMake is older than
3.12, the extra ... dots will be seen as version component separators, resulting in the ...<max> part
being ignored and preserving the pre-3.12 behavior of basing policies on <min>.
The FATAL_ERROR option is accepted but ignored by CMake 2.6 and higher. It should be specified so CMake
versions 2.4 and lower fail with an error instead of just a warning.
NOTE:
Call the cmake_minimum_required() command at the beginning of the top-level CMakeLists.txt file even
before calling the project() command. It is important to establish version and policy settings before
invoking other commands whose behavior they may affect. See also policy CMP0000.
Calling cmake_minimum_required() inside a function() limits some effects to the function scope when
invoked. Such calls should not be made with the intention of having global effects.
Policy Settings
The cmake_minimum_required(VERSION) command implicitly invokes the cmake_policy(VERSION) command to
specify that the current project code is written for the given range of CMake versions. All policies
known to the running version of CMake and introduced in the <min> (or <max>, if specified) version or
earlier will be set to use NEW behavior. All policies introduced in later versions will be unset. This
effectively requests behavior preferred as of a given CMake version and tells newer CMake versions to
warn about their new policies.
When a <min> version higher than 2.4 is specified the command implicitly invokes
cmake_policy(VERSION <min>[...<max>])
which sets CMake policies based on the range of versions specified. When a <min> version 2.4 or lower is
given the command implicitly invokes
cmake_policy(VERSION 2.4[...<max>])
which enables compatibility features for CMake 2.4 and lower.
cmake_parse_arguments
Parse function or macro arguments.
cmake_parse_arguments(<prefix> <options> <one_value_keywords>
<multi_value_keywords> <args>...)
cmake_parse_arguments(PARSE_ARGV <N> <prefix> <options>
<one_value_keywords> <multi_value_keywords>)
This command is for use in macros or functions. It processes the arguments given to that macro or
function, and defines a set of variables which hold the values of the respective options.
The first signature reads processes arguments passed in the <args>.... This may be used in either a
macro() or a function().
The PARSE_ARGV signature is only for use in a function() body. In this case the arguments that are
parsed come from the ARGV# variables of the calling function. The parsing starts with the <N>-th
argument, where <N> is an unsigned integer. This allows for the values to have special characters like ;
in them.
The <options> argument contains all options for the respective macro, i.e. keywords which can be used
when calling the macro without any value following, like e.g. the OPTIONAL keyword of the install()
command.
The <one_value_keywords> argument contains all keywords for this macro which are followed by one value,
like e.g. DESTINATION keyword of the install() command.
The <multi_value_keywords> argument contains all keywords for this macro which can be followed by more
than one value, like e.g. the TARGETS or FILES keywords of the install() command.
NOTE:
All keywords shall be unique. I.e. every keyword shall only be specified once in either <options>,
<one_value_keywords> or <multi_value_keywords>. A warning will be emitted if uniqueness is violated.
When done, cmake_parse_arguments will consider for each of the keywords listed in <options>,
<one_value_keywords> and <multi_value_keywords> a variable composed of the given <prefix> followed by "_"
and the name of the respective keyword. These variables will then hold the respective value from the
argument list or be undefined if the associated option could not be found. For the <options> keywords,
these will always be defined, to TRUE or FALSE, whether the option is in the argument list or not.
All remaining arguments are collected in a variable <prefix>_UNPARSED_ARGUMENTS that will be undefined if
all arguments were recognized. This can be checked afterwards to see whether your macro was called with
unrecognized parameters.
<one_value_keywords> and <multi_value_keywords> that were given no values at all are collected in a
variable <prefix>_KEYWORDS_MISSING_VALUES that will be undefined if all keywords received values. This
can be checked to see if there were keywords without any values given.
Consider the following example macro, my_install(), which takes similar arguments to the real install()
command:
macro(my_install)
set(options OPTIONAL FAST)
set(oneValueArgs DESTINATION RENAME)
set(multiValueArgs TARGETS CONFIGURATIONS)
cmake_parse_arguments(MY_INSTALL "${options}" "${oneValueArgs}"
"${multiValueArgs}" ${ARGN} )
# ...
Assume my_install() has been called like this:
my_install(TARGETS foo bar DESTINATION bin OPTIONAL blub CONFIGURATIONS)
After the cmake_parse_arguments call the macro will have set or undefined the following variables:
MY_INSTALL_OPTIONAL = TRUE
MY_INSTALL_FAST = FALSE # was not used in call to my_install
MY_INSTALL_DESTINATION = "bin"
MY_INSTALL_RENAME <UNDEFINED> # was not used
MY_INSTALL_TARGETS = "foo;bar"
MY_INSTALL_CONFIGURATIONS <UNDEFINED> # was not used
MY_INSTALL_UNPARSED_ARGUMENTS = "blub" # nothing expected after "OPTIONAL"
MY_INSTALL_KEYWORDS_MISSING_VALUES = "CONFIGURATIONS"
# No value for "CONFIGURATIONS" given
You can then continue and process these variables.
Keywords terminate lists of values, e.g. if directly after a one_value_keyword another recognized keyword
follows, this is interpreted as the beginning of the new option. E.g. my_install(TARGETS foo
DESTINATION OPTIONAL) would result in MY_INSTALL_DESTINATION set to "OPTIONAL", but as OPTIONAL is a
keyword itself MY_INSTALL_DESTINATION will be empty (but added to MY_INSTALL_KEYWORDS_MISSING_VALUES) and
MY_INSTALL_OPTIONAL will therefore be set to TRUE.
cmake_policy
Manage CMake Policy settings. See the cmake-policies(7) manual for defined policies.
As CMake evolves it is sometimes necessary to change existing behavior in order to fix bugs or improve
implementations of existing features. The CMake Policy mechanism is designed to help keep existing
projects building as new versions of CMake introduce changes in behavior. Each new policy (behavioral
change) is given an identifier of the form CMP<NNNN> where <NNNN> is an integer index. Documentation
associated with each policy describes the OLD and NEW behavior and the reason the policy was introduced.
Projects may set each policy to select the desired behavior. When CMake needs to know which behavior to
use it checks for a setting specified by the project. If no setting is available the OLD behavior is
assumed and a warning is produced requesting that the policy be set.
Setting Policies by CMake Version
The cmake_policy command is used to set policies to OLD or NEW behavior. While setting policies
individually is supported, we encourage projects to set policies based on CMake versions:
cmake_policy(VERSION <min>[...<max>])
<min> and the optional <max> are each CMake versions of the form major.minor[.patch[.tweak]], and the ...
is literal. The <min> version must be at least 2.4 and at most the running version of CMake. The <max>
version, if specified, must be at least the <min> version but may exceed the running version of CMake.
If the running version of CMake is older than 3.12, the extra ... dots will be seen as version component
separators, resulting in the ...<max> part being ignored and preserving the pre-3.12 behavior of basing
policies on <min>.
This specifies that the current CMake code is written for the given range of CMake versions. All
policies known to the running version of CMake and introduced in the <min> (or <max>, if specified)
version or earlier will be set to use NEW behavior. All policies introduced in later versions will be
unset (unless the CMAKE_POLICY_DEFAULT_CMP<NNNN> variable sets a default). This effectively requests
behavior preferred as of a given CMake version and tells newer CMake versions to warn about their new
policies.
Note that the cmake_minimum_required(VERSION) command implicitly calls cmake_policy(VERSION) too.
Setting Policies Explicitly
cmake_policy(SET CMP<NNNN> NEW)
cmake_policy(SET CMP<NNNN> OLD)
Tell CMake to use the OLD or NEW behavior for a given policy. Projects depending on the old behavior of
a given policy may silence a policy warning by setting the policy state to OLD. Alternatively one may
fix the project to work with the new behavior and set the policy state to NEW.
NOTE:
The OLD behavior of a policy is deprecated by definition and may be removed in a future version of
CMake.
Checking Policy Settings
cmake_policy(GET CMP<NNNN> <variable>)
Check whether a given policy is set to OLD or NEW behavior. The output <variable> value will be OLD or
NEW if the policy is set, and empty otherwise.
CMake Policy Stack
CMake keeps policy settings on a stack, so changes made by the cmake_policy command affect only the top
of the stack. A new entry on the policy stack is managed automatically for each subdirectory to protect
its parents and siblings. CMake also manages a new entry for scripts loaded by include() and
find_package() commands except when invoked with the NO_POLICY_SCOPE option (see also policy CMP0011).
The cmake_policy command provides an interface to manage custom entries on the policy stack:
cmake_policy(PUSH)
cmake_policy(POP)
Each PUSH must have a matching POP to erase any changes. This is useful to make temporary changes to
policy settings. Calls to the cmake_minimum_required(VERSION), cmake_policy(VERSION), or
cmake_policy(SET) commands influence only the current top of the policy stack.
Commands created by the function() and macro() commands record policy settings when they are created and
use the pre-record policies when they are invoked. If the function or macro implementation sets
policies, the changes automatically propagate up through callers until they reach the closest nested
policy stack entry.
configure_file
Copy a file to another location and modify its contents.
configure_file(<input> <output>
[COPYONLY] [ESCAPE_QUOTES] [@ONLY]
[NEWLINE_STYLE [UNIX|DOS|WIN32|LF|CRLF] ])
Copies an <input> file to an <output> file and substitutes variable values referenced as @VAR@ or ${VAR}
in the input file content. Each variable reference will be replaced with the current value of the
variable, or the empty string if the variable is not defined. Furthermore, input lines of the form
#cmakedefine VAR ...
will be replaced with either
#define VAR ...
or
/* #undef VAR */
depending on whether VAR is set in CMake to any value not considered a false constant by the if()
command. The “…” content on the line after the variable name, if any, is processed as above. Input file
lines of the form #cmakedefine01 VAR will be replaced with either #define VAR 1 or #define VAR 0
similarly. The result lines (with the exception of the #undef comments) can be indented using spaces
and/or tabs between the # character and the cmakedefine or cmakedefine01 words. This whitespace
indentation will be preserved in the output lines:
# cmakedefine VAR
# cmakedefine01 VAR
will be replaced, if VAR is defined, with
# define VAR
# define VAR 1
If the input file is modified the build system will re-run CMake to re-configure the file and generate
the build system again. The generated file is modified and its timestamp updated on subsequent cmake
runs only if its content is changed.
The arguments are:
<input>
Path to the input file. A relative path is treated with respect to the value of
CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR. The input path must be a file, not a directory.
<output>
Path to the output file or directory. A relative path is treated with respect to the value of
CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR. If the path names an existing directory the output file is placed in
that directory with the same file name as the input file.
COPYONLY
Copy the file without replacing any variable references or other content. This option may not be
used with NEWLINE_STYLE.
ESCAPE_QUOTES
Escape any substituted quotes with backslashes (C-style).
@ONLY Restrict variable replacement to references of the form @VAR@. This is useful for configuring
scripts that use ${VAR} syntax.
NEWLINE_STYLE <style>
Specify the newline style for the output file. Specify UNIX or LF for \n newlines, or specify
DOS, WIN32, or CRLF for \r\n newlines. This option may not be used with COPYONLY.
Example
Consider a source tree containing a foo.h.in file:
#cmakedefine FOO_ENABLE
#cmakedefine FOO_STRING "@FOO_STRING@"
An adjacent CMakeLists.txt may use configure_file to configure the header:
option(FOO_ENABLE "Enable Foo" ON)
if(FOO_ENABLE)
set(FOO_STRING "foo")
endif()
configure_file(foo.h.in foo.h @ONLY)
This creates a foo.h in the build directory corresponding to this source directory. If the FOO_ENABLE
option is on, the configured file will contain:
#define FOO_ENABLE
#define FOO_STRING "foo"
Otherwise it will contain:
/* #undef FOO_ENABLE */
/* #undef FOO_STRING */
One may then use the include_directories() command to specify the output directory as an include
directory:
include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
so that sources may include the header as #include <foo.h>.
continue
Continue to the top of enclosing foreach or while loop.
continue()
The continue command allows a cmake script to abort the rest of a block in a foreach() or while() loop,
and start at the top of the next iteration.
See also the break() command.
else
Starts the else portion of an if block.
else([<condition>])
See the if() command.
elseif
Starts an elseif portion of an if block.
elseif(<condition>)
See the if() command, especially for the syntax and logic of the <condition>.
endforeach
Ends a list of commands in a foreach block.
endforeach([<loop_var>])
See the foreach() command.
The optional <loop_var> argument is supported for backward compatibility only. If used it must be a
verbatim repeat of the <loop_var> argument of the opening foreach clause.
endfunction
Ends a list of commands in a function block.
endfunction([<name>])
See the function() command.
The optional <name> argument is supported for backward compatibility only. If used it must be a verbatim
repeat of the <name> argument of the opening function command.
endif
Ends a list of commands in an if block.
endif([<condition>])
See the if() command.
The optional <condition> argument is supported for backward compatibility only. If used it must be a
verbatim repeat of the argument of the opening if clause.
endmacro
Ends a list of commands in a macro block.
endmacro([<name>])
See the macro() command.
The optional <name> argument is supported for backward compatibility only. If used it must be a verbatim
repeat of the <name> argument of the opening macro command.
endwhile
Ends a list of commands in a while block.
endwhile([<condition>])
See the while() command.
The optional <condition> argument is supported for backward compatibility only. If used it must be a
verbatim repeat of the argument of the opening while clause.
execute_process
Execute one or more child processes.
execute_process(COMMAND <cmd1> [<arguments>]
[COMMAND <cmd2> [<arguments>]]...
[WORKING_DIRECTORY <directory>]
[TIMEOUT <seconds>]
[RESULT_VARIABLE <variable>]
[RESULTS_VARIABLE <variable>]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <variable>]
[ERROR_VARIABLE <variable>]
[INPUT_FILE <file>]
[OUTPUT_FILE <file>]
[ERROR_FILE <file>]
[OUTPUT_QUIET]
[ERROR_QUIET]
[COMMAND_ECHO <where>]
[OUTPUT_STRIP_TRAILING_WHITESPACE]
[ERROR_STRIP_TRAILING_WHITESPACE]
[ENCODING <name>])
Runs the given sequence of one or more commands.
Commands are executed concurrently as a pipeline, with the standard output of each process piped to the
standard input of the next. A single standard error pipe is used for all processes.
Options:
COMMAND
A child process command line.
CMake executes the child process using operating system APIs directly. All arguments are passed
VERBATIM to the child process. No intermediate shell is used, so shell operators such as > are
treated as normal arguments. (Use the INPUT_*, OUTPUT_*, and ERROR_* options to redirect stdin,
stdout, and stderr.)
If a sequential execution of multiple commands is required, use multiple execute_process() calls
with a single COMMAND argument.
WORKING_DIRECTORY
The named directory will be set as the current working directory of the child processes.
TIMEOUT
After the specified number of seconds (fractions allowed), all unfinished child processes will be
terminated, and the RESULT_VARIABLE will be set to a string mentioning the “timeout”.
RESULT_VARIABLE
The variable will be set to contain the result of last child process. This will be an integer
return code from the last child or a string describing an error condition.
RESULTS_VARIABLE <variable>
The variable will be set to contain the result of all processes as a semicolon-separated list, in
order of the given COMMAND arguments. Each entry will be an integer return code from the
corresponding child or a string describing an error condition.
OUTPUT_VARIABLE, ERROR_VARIABLE
The variable named will be set with the contents of the standard output and standard error pipes,
respectively. If the same variable is named for both pipes their output will be merged in the
order produced.
INPUT_FILE, OUTPUT_FILE, ERROR_FILE
The file named will be attached to the standard input of the first process, standard output of the
last process, or standard error of all processes, respectively. If the same file is named for
both output and error then it will be used for both.
OUTPUT_QUIET, ERROR_QUIET
The standard output or standard error results will be quietly ignored.
COMMAND_ECHO <where>
The command being run will be echo’ed to <where> with <where> being set to one of STDERR, STDOUT
or NONE. See the CMAKE_EXECUTE_PROCESS_COMMAND_ECHO variable for a way to control the default
behavior when this option is not present.
ENCODING <name>
On Windows, the encoding that is used to decode output from the process. Ignored on other
platforms. Valid encoding names are:
NONE Perform no decoding. This assumes that the process output is encoded in the same way as
CMake’s internal encoding (UTF-8). This is the default.
AUTO Use the current active console’s codepage or if that isn’t available then use ANSI.
ANSI Use the ANSI codepage.
OEM Use the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) code page.
UTF8 or UTF-8
Use the UTF-8 codepage. Prior to CMake 3.11.0, only UTF8 was accepted for this encoding. In
CMake 3.11.0, UTF-8 was added for consistency with the UTF-8 RFC naming convention.
If more than one OUTPUT_* or ERROR_* option is given for the same pipe the precedence is not specified.
If no OUTPUT_* or ERROR_* options are given the output will be shared with the corresponding pipes of the
CMake process itself.
The execute_process() command is a newer more powerful version of exec_program(), but the old command has
been kept for compatibility. Both commands run while CMake is processing the project prior to build
system generation. Use add_custom_target() and add_custom_command() to create custom commands that run
at build time.
file
File manipulation command.
Synopsis
Reading
file(READ <filename> <out-var> [...])
file(STRINGS <filename> <out-var> [...])
file(<HASH> <filename> <out-var>)
file(TIMESTAMP <filename> <out-var> [...])
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES [...])
Writing
file({WRITE | APPEND} <filename> <content>...)
file({TOUCH | TOUCH_NOCREATE} [<file>...])
file(GENERATE OUTPUT <output-file> [...])
Filesystem
file({GLOB | GLOB_RECURSE} <out-var> [...] [<globbing-expr>...])
file(RENAME <oldname> <newname>)
file({REMOVE | REMOVE_RECURSE } [<files>...])
file(MAKE_DIRECTORY [<dir>...])
file({COPY | INSTALL} <file>... DESTINATION <dir> [...])
file(SIZE <filename> <out-var>)
file(READ_SYMLINK <linkname> <out-var>)
file(CREATE_LINK <original> <linkname> [...])
Path Conversion
file(RELATIVE_PATH <out-var> <directory> <file>)
file({TO_CMAKE_PATH | TO_NATIVE_PATH} <path> <out-var>)
Transfer
file(DOWNLOAD <url> <file> [...])
file(UPLOAD <file> <url> [...])
Locking
file(LOCK <path> [...])
Reading
file(READ <filename> <variable>
[OFFSET <offset>] [LIMIT <max-in>] [HEX])
Read content from a file called <filename> and store it in a <variable>. Optionally start from the given
<offset> and read at most <max-in> bytes. The HEX option causes data to be converted to a hexadecimal
representation (useful for binary data).
file(STRINGS <filename> <variable> [<options>...])
Parse a list of ASCII strings from <filename> and store it in <variable>. Binary data in the file are
ignored. Carriage return (\r, CR) characters are ignored. The options are:
LENGTH_MAXIMUM <max-len>
Consider only strings of at most a given length.
LENGTH_MINIMUM <min-len>
Consider only strings of at least a given length.
LIMIT_COUNT <max-num>
Limit the number of distinct strings to be extracted.
LIMIT_INPUT <max-in>
Limit the number of input bytes to read from the file.
LIMIT_OUTPUT <max-out>
Limit the number of total bytes to store in the <variable>.
NEWLINE_CONSUME
Treat newline characters (\n, LF) as part of string content instead of terminating at them.
NO_HEX_CONVERSION
Intel Hex and Motorola S-record files are automatically converted to binary while reading unless
this option is given.
REGEX <regex>
Consider only strings that match the given regular expression.
ENCODING <encoding-type>
Consider strings of a given encoding. Currently supported encodings are: UTF-8, UTF-16LE,
UTF-16BE, UTF-32LE, UTF-32BE. If the ENCODING option is not provided and the file has a Byte
Order Mark, the ENCODING option will be defaulted to respect the Byte Order Mark.
For example, the code
file(STRINGS myfile.txt myfile)
stores a list in the variable myfile in which each item is a line from the input file.
file(<HASH> <filename> <variable>)
Compute a cryptographic hash of the content of <filename> and store it in a <variable>. The supported
<HASH> algorithm names are those listed by the string(<HASH>) command.
file(TIMESTAMP <filename> <variable> [<format>] [UTC])
Compute a string representation of the modification time of <filename> and store it in <variable>.
Should the command be unable to obtain a timestamp variable will be set to the empty string (“”).
See the string(TIMESTAMP) command for documentation of the <format> and UTC options.
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES
[RESOLVED_DEPENDENCIES_VAR <deps_var>]
[UNRESOLVED_DEPENDENCIES_VAR <unresolved_deps_var>]
[CONFLICTING_DEPENDENCIES_PREFIX <conflicting_deps_prefix>]
[EXECUTABLES [<executable_files>...]]
[LIBRARIES [<library_files>...]]
[MODULES [<module_files>...]]
[DIRECTORIES [<directories>...]]
[BUNDLE_EXECUTABLE <bundle_executable_file>]
[PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES [<regexes>...]]
[PRE_EXCLUDE_REGEXES [<regexes>...]]
[POST_INCLUDE_REGEXES [<regexes>...]]
[POST_EXCLUDE_REGEXES [<regexes>...]]
)
Recursively get the list of libraries depended on by the given files.
Please note that this sub-command is not intended to be used in project mode. Instead, use it in an
install(CODE) or install(SCRIPT) block. For example:
install(CODE [[
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES
# ...
)
]])
The arguments are as follows:
RESOLVED_DEPENDENCIES_VAR <deps_var>
Name of the variable in which to store the list of resolved dependencies.
UNRESOLVED_DEPENDENCIES_VAR <unresolved_deps_var>
Name of the variable in which to store the list of unresolved dependencies. If this variable is
not specified, and there are any unresolved dependencies, an error is issued.
CONFLICTING_DEPENDENCIES_PREFIX <conflicting_deps_prefix>
Variable prefix in which to store conflicting dependency information. Dependencies are
conflicting if two files with the same name are found in two different directories. The list of
filenames that conflict are stored in <conflicting_deps_prefix>_FILENAMES. For each filename, the
list of paths that were found for that filename are stored in
<conflicting_deps_prefix>_<filename>.
EXECUTABLES <executable_files>
List of executable files to read for dependencies. These are executables that are typically
created with add_executable(), but they do not have to be created by CMake. On Apple platforms,
the paths to these files determine the value of @executable_path when recursively resolving the
libraries. Specifying any kind of library (STATIC, MODULE, or SHARED) here will result in
undefined behavior.
LIBRARIES <library_files>
List of library files to read for dependencies. These are libraries that are typically created
with add_library(SHARED), but they do not have to be created by CMake. Specifying STATIC
libraries, MODULE libraries, or executables here will result in undefined behavior.
MODULES <module_files>
List of loadable module files to read for dependencies. These are modules that are typically
created with add_library(MODULE), but they do not have to be created by CMake. They are typically
used by calling dlopen() at runtime rather than linked at link time with ld -l. Specifying STATIC
libraries, SHARED libraries, or executables here will result in undefined behavior.
DIRECTORIES <directories>
List of additional directories to search for dependencies. On Linux platforms, these directories
are searched if the dependency is not found in any of the other usual paths. If it is found in
such a directory, a warning is issued, because it means that the file is incomplete (it does not
list all of the directories that contain its dependencies). On Windows platforms, these
directories are searched if the dependency is not found in any of the other search paths, but no
warning is issued, because searching other paths is a normal part of Windows dependency
resolution. On Apple platforms, this argument has no effect.
BUNDLE_EXECUTABLE <bundle_executable_file>
Executable to treat as the “bundle executable” when resolving libraries. On Apple platforms, this
argument determines the value of @executable_path when recursively resolving libraries for
LIBRARIES and MODULES files. It has no effect on EXECUTABLES files. On other platforms, it has no
effect. This is typically (but not always) one of the executables in the EXECUTABLES argument
which designates the “main” executable of the package.
The following arguments specify filters for including or excluding libraries to be resolved. See below
for a full description of how they work.
PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES <regexes>
List of pre-include regexes through which to filter the names of not-yet-resolved dependencies.
PRE_EXCLUDE_REGEXES <regexes>
List of pre-exclude regexes through which to filter the names of not-yet-resolved dependencies.
POST_INCLUDE_REGEXES <regexes>
List of post-include regexes through which to filter the names of resolved dependencies.
POST_EXCLUDE_REGEXES <regexes>
List of post-exclude regexes through which to filter the names of resolved dependencies.
These arguments can be used to blacklist unwanted system libraries when resolving the dependencies, or to
whitelist libraries from a specific directory. The filtering works as follows:
1. If the not-yet-resolved dependency matches any of the PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES, steps 2 and 3 are skipped,
and the dependency resolution proceeds to step 4.
2. If the not-yet-resolved dependency matches any of the PRE_EXCLUDE_REGEXES, dependency resolution stops
for that dependency.
3. Otherwise, dependency resolution proceeds.
4. file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES) searches for the dependency according to the linking rules of the
platform (see below).
5. If the dependency is found, and its full path matches one of the POST_INCLUDE_REGEXES, the full path
is added to the resolved dependencies, and file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES) recursively resolves that
library’s own dependencies. Otherwise, resolution proceeds to step 6.
6. If the dependency is found, but its full path matches one of the POST_EXCLUDE_REGEXES, it is not added
to the resolved dependencies, and dependency resolution stops for that dependency.
7. If the dependency is found, and its full path does not match either POST_INCLUDE_REGEXES or
POST_EXCLUDE_REGEXES, the full path is added to the resolved dependencies, and
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES) recursively resolves that library’s own dependencies.
Different platforms have different rules for how dependencies are resolved. These specifics are
described here.
On Linux platforms, library resolution works as follows:
1. If the depending file does not have any RUNPATH entries, and the library exists in one of the
depending file’s RPATH entries, or its parents’, in that order, the dependency is resolved to that
file.
2. Otherwise, if the depending file has any RUNPATH entries, and the library exists in one of those
entries, the dependency is resolved to that file.
3. Otherwise, if the library exists in one of the directories listed by ldconfig, the dependency is
resolved to that file.
4. Otherwise, if the library exists in one of the DIRECTORIES entries, the dependency is resolved to that
file. In this case, a warning is issued, because finding a file in one of the DIRECTORIES means that
the depending file is not complete (it does not list all the directories from which it pulls
dependencies).
5. Otherwise, the dependency is unresolved.
On Windows platforms, library resolution works as follows:
1. The dependent DLL name is converted to lowercase. Windows DLL names are case-insensitive, and some
linkers mangle the case of the DLL dependency names. However, this makes it more difficult for
PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES, PRE_EXCLUDE_REGEXES, POST_INCLUDE_REGEXES, and POST_EXCLUDE_REGEXES to properly
filter DLL names - every regex would have to check for both uppercase and lowercase letters. For
example:
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES
# ...
PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES "^[Mm][Yy][Ll][Ii][Bb][Rr][Aa][Rr][Yy]\\.[Dd][Ll][Ll]$"
)
Converting the DLL name to lowercase allows the regexes to only match lowercase names, thus
simplifying the regex. For example:
file(GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES
# ...
PRE_INCLUDE_REGEXES "^mylibrary\\.dll$"
)
This regex will match mylibrary.dll regardless of how it is cased, either on disk or in the depending
file. (For example, it will match mylibrary.dll, MyLibrary.dll, and MYLIBRARY.DLL.)
Please note that the directory portion of any resolved DLLs retains its casing and is not converted to
lowercase. Only the filename portion is converted.
2. (Not yet implemented) If the depending file is a Windows Store app, and the dependency is listed as a
dependency in the application’s package manifest, the dependency is resolved to that file.
3. Otherwise, if the library exists in the same directory as the depending file, the dependency is
resolved to that file.
4. Otherwise, if the library exists in either the operating system’s system32 directory or the Windows
directory, in that order, the dependency is resolved to that file.
5. Otherwise, if the library exists in one of the directories specified by DIRECTORIES, in the order they
are listed, the dependency is resolved to that file. In this case, a warning is not issued, because
searching other directories is a normal part of Windows library resolution.
6. Otherwise, the dependency is unresolved.
On Apple platforms, library resolution works as follows:
1. If the dependency starts with @executable_path/, and an EXECUTABLES argument is in the process of
being resolved, and replacing @executable_path/ with the directory of the executable yields an
existing file, the dependency is resolved to that file.
2. Otherwise, if the dependency starts with @executable_path/, and there is a BUNDLE_EXECUTABLE argument,
and replacing @executable_path/ with the directory of the bundle executable yields an existing file,
the dependency is resolved to that file.
3. Otherwise, if the dependency starts with @loader_path/, and replacing @loader_path/ with the directory
of the depending file yields an existing file, the dependency is resolved to that file.
4. Otherwise, if the dependency starts with @rpath/, and replacing @rpath/ with one of the RPATH entries
of the depending file yields an existing file, the dependency is resolved to that file. Note that
RPATH entries that start with @executable_path/ or @loader_path/ also have these items replaced with
the appropriate path.
5. Otherwise, if the dependency is an absolute file that exists, the dependency is resolved to that file.
6. Otherwise, the dependency is unresolved.
This function accepts several variables that determine which tool is used for dependency resolution:
CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_PLATFORM
Determines which operating system and executable format the files are built for. This could be one
of several values:
• linux+elf
• windows+pe
• macos+macho
If this variable is not specified, it is determined automatically by system introspection.
CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_TOOL
Determines the tool to use for dependency resolution. It could be one of several values, depending
on the value of CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_PLATFORM:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_PLATFORM │ CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_TOOL │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ linux+elf │ objdump │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ windows+pe │ dumpbin │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ windows+pe │ objdump │
├─────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ macos+macho │ otool │
└─────────────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────┘
If this variable is not specified, it is determined automatically by system introspection.
CMAKE_GET_RUNTIME_DEPENDENCIES_COMMAND
Determines the path to the tool to use for dependency resolution. This is the actual path to
objdump, dumpbin, or otool.
If this variable is not specified, it is determined automatically by system introspection.
Writing
file(WRITE <filename> <content>...)
file(APPEND <filename> <content>...)
Write <content> into a file called <filename>. If the file does not exist, it will be created. If the
file already exists, WRITE mode will overwrite it and APPEND mode will append to the end. Any
directories in the path specified by <filename> that do not exist will be created.
If the file is a build input, use the configure_file() command to update the file only when its content
changes.
file(TOUCH [<files>...])
file(TOUCH_NOCREATE [<files>...])
Create a file with no content if it does not yet exist. If the file already exists, its access and/or
modification will be updated to the time when the function call is executed.
Use TOUCH_NOCREATE to touch a file if it exists but not create it. If a file does not exist it will be
silently ignored.
With TOUCH and TOUCH_NOCREATE the contents of an existing file will not be modified.
file(GENERATE OUTPUT output-file
<INPUT input-file|CONTENT content>
[CONDITION expression])
Generate an output file for each build configuration supported by the current CMake Generator. Evaluate
generator expressions from the input content to produce the output content. The options are:
CONDITION <condition>
Generate the output file for a particular configuration only if the condition is true. The
condition must be either 0 or 1 after evaluating generator expressions.
CONTENT <content>
Use the content given explicitly as input.
INPUT <input-file>
Use the content from a given file as input. A relative path is treated with respect to the value
of CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR. See policy CMP0070.
OUTPUT <output-file>
Specify the output file name to generate. Use generator expressions such as $<CONFIG> to specify
a configuration-specific output file name. Multiple configurations may generate the same output
file only if the generated content is identical. Otherwise, the <output-file> must evaluate to an
unique name for each configuration. A relative path (after evaluating generator expressions) is
treated with respect to the value of CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR. See policy CMP0070.
Exactly one CONTENT or INPUT option must be given. A specific OUTPUT file may be named by at most one
invocation of file(GENERATE). Generated files are modified and their timestamp updated on subsequent
cmake runs only if their content is changed.
Note also that file(GENERATE) does not create the output file until the generation phase. The output file
will not yet have been written when the file(GENERATE) command returns, it is written only after
processing all of a project’s CMakeLists.txt files.
Filesystem
file(GLOB <variable>
[LIST_DIRECTORIES true|false] [RELATIVE <path>] [CONFIGURE_DEPENDS]
[<globbing-expressions>...])
file(GLOB_RECURSE <variable> [FOLLOW_SYMLINKS]
[LIST_DIRECTORIES true|false] [RELATIVE <path>] [CONFIGURE_DEPENDS]
[<globbing-expressions>...])
Generate a list of files that match the <globbing-expressions> and store it into the <variable>.
Globbing expressions are similar to regular expressions, but much simpler. If RELATIVE flag is
specified, the results will be returned as relative paths to the given path. The results will be ordered
lexicographically.
On Windows and macOS, globbing is case-insensitive even if the underlying filesystem is case-sensitive
(both filenames and globbing expressions are converted to lowercase before matching). On other
platforms, globbing is case-sensitive.
If the CONFIGURE_DEPENDS flag is specified, CMake will add logic to the main build system check target to
rerun the flagged GLOB commands at build time. If any of the outputs change, CMake will regenerate the
build system.
By default GLOB lists directories - directories are omitted in result if LIST_DIRECTORIES is set to
false.
NOTE:
We do not recommend using GLOB to collect a list of source files from your source tree. If no
CMakeLists.txt file changes when a source is added or removed then the generated build system cannot
know when to ask CMake to regenerate. The CONFIGURE_DEPENDS flag may not work reliably on all
generators, or if a new generator is added in the future that cannot support it, projects using it
will be stuck. Even if CONFIGURE_DEPENDS works reliably, there is still a cost to perform the check on
every rebuild.
Examples of globbing expressions include:
*.cxx - match all files with extension cxx
*.vt? - match all files with extension vta,...,vtz
f[3-5].txt - match files f3.txt, f4.txt, f5.txt
The GLOB_RECURSE mode will traverse all the subdirectories of the matched directory and match the files.
Subdirectories that are symlinks are only traversed if FOLLOW_SYMLINKS is given or policy CMP0009 is not
set to NEW.
By default GLOB_RECURSE omits directories from result list - setting LIST_DIRECTORIES to true adds
directories to result list. If FOLLOW_SYMLINKS is given or policy CMP0009 is not set to OLD then
LIST_DIRECTORIES treats symlinks as directories.
Examples of recursive globbing include:
/dir/*.py - match all python files in /dir and subdirectories
file(RENAME <oldname> <newname>)
Move a file or directory within a filesystem from <oldname> to <newname>, replacing the destination
atomically.
file(REMOVE [<files>...])
file(REMOVE_RECURSE [<files>...])
Remove the given files. The REMOVE_RECURSE mode will remove the given files and directories, also
non-empty directories. No error is emitted if a given file does not exist. Relative input paths are
evaluated with respect to the current source directory. Empty input paths are ignored with a warning.
file(MAKE_DIRECTORY [<directories>...])
Create the given directories and their parents as needed.
file(<COPY|INSTALL> <files>... DESTINATION <dir>
[FILE_PERMISSIONS <permissions>...]
[DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS <permissions>...]
[NO_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS] [USE_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS]
[FOLLOW_SYMLINK_CHAIN]
[FILES_MATCHING]
[[PATTERN <pattern> | REGEX <regex>]
[EXCLUDE] [PERMISSIONS <permissions>...]] [...])
The COPY signature copies files, directories, and symlinks to a destination folder. Relative input paths
are evaluated with respect to the current source directory, and a relative destination is evaluated with
respect to the current build directory. Copying preserves input file timestamps, and optimizes out a
file if it exists at the destination with the same timestamp. Copying preserves input permissions unless
explicit permissions or NO_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS are given (default is USE_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS).
If FOLLOW_SYMLINK_CHAIN is specified, COPY will recursively resolve the symlinks at the paths given until
a real file is found, and install a corresponding symlink in the destination for each symlink
encountered. For each symlink that is installed, the resolution is stripped of the directory, leaving
only the filename, meaning that the new symlink points to a file in the same directory as the symlink.
This feature is useful on some Unix systems, where libraries are installed as a chain of symlinks with
version numbers, with less specific versions pointing to more specific versions. FOLLOW_SYMLINK_CHAIN
will install all of these symlinks and the library itself into the destination directory. For example, if
you have the following directory structure:
• /opt/foo/lib/libfoo.so.1.2.3
• /opt/foo/lib/libfoo.so.1.2 -> libfoo.so.1.2.3
• /opt/foo/lib/libfoo.so.1 -> libfoo.so.1.2
• /opt/foo/lib/libfoo.so -> libfoo.so.1
and you do:
file(COPY /opt/foo/lib/libfoo.so DESTINATION lib FOLLOW_SYMLINK_CHAIN)
This will install all of the symlinks and libfoo.so.1.2.3 itself into lib.
See the install(DIRECTORY) command for documentation of permissions, FILES_MATCHING, PATTERN, REGEX, and
EXCLUDE options. Copying directories preserves the structure of their content even if options are used
to select a subset of files.
The INSTALL signature differs slightly from COPY: it prints status messages (subject to the
CMAKE_INSTALL_MESSAGE variable), and NO_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS is default. Installation scripts generated by
the install() command use this signature (with some undocumented options for internal use).
file(SIZE <filename> <variable>)
Determine the file size of the <filename> and put the result in <variable> variable. Requires that
<filename> is a valid path pointing to a file and is readable.
file(READ_SYMLINK <linkname> <variable>)
This subcommand queries the symlink <linkname> and stores the path it points to in the result <variable>.
If <linkname> does not exist or is not a symlink, CMake issues a fatal error.
Note that this command returns the raw symlink path and does not resolve a relative path. The following
is an example of how to ensure that an absolute path is obtained:
set(linkname "/path/to/foo.sym")
file(READ_SYMLINK "${linkname}" result)
if(NOT IS_ABSOLUTE "${result}")
get_filename_component(dir "${linkname}" DIRECTORY)
set(result "${dir}/${result}")
endif()
file(CREATE_LINK <original> <linkname>
[RESULT <result>] [COPY_ON_ERROR] [SYMBOLIC])
Create a link <linkname> that points to <original>. It will be a hard link by default, but providing the
SYMBOLIC option results in a symbolic link instead. Hard links require that original exists and is a
file, not a directory. If <linkname> already exists, it will be overwritten.
The <result> variable, if specified, receives the status of the operation. It is set to 0 upon success
or an error message otherwise. If RESULT is not specified and the operation fails, a fatal error is
emitted.
Specifying COPY_ON_ERROR enables copying the file as a fallback if creating the link fails. It can be
useful for handling situations such as <original> and <linkname> being on different drives or mount
points, which would make them unable to support a hard link.
Path Conversion
file(RELATIVE_PATH <variable> <directory> <file>)
Compute the relative path from a <directory> to a <file> and store it in the <variable>.
file(TO_CMAKE_PATH "<path>" <variable>)
file(TO_NATIVE_PATH "<path>" <variable>)
The TO_CMAKE_PATH mode converts a native <path> into a cmake-style path with forward-slashes (/). The
input can be a single path or a system search path like $ENV{PATH}. A search path will be converted to a
cmake-style list separated by ; characters.
The TO_NATIVE_PATH mode converts a cmake-style <path> into a native path with platform-specific slashes
(\ on Windows and / elsewhere).
Always use double quotes around the <path> to be sure it is treated as a single argument to this command.
Transfer
file(DOWNLOAD <url> <file> [<options>...])
file(UPLOAD <file> <url> [<options>...])
The DOWNLOAD mode downloads the given <url> to a local <file>. The UPLOAD mode uploads a local <file> to
a given <url>.
Options to both DOWNLOAD and UPLOAD are:
INACTIVITY_TIMEOUT <seconds>
Terminate the operation after a period of inactivity.
LOG <variable>
Store a human-readable log of the operation in a variable.
SHOW_PROGRESS
Print progress information as status messages until the operation is complete.
STATUS <variable>
Store the resulting status of the operation in a variable. The status is a ; separated list of
length 2. The first element is the numeric return value for the operation, and the second element
is a string value for the error. A 0 numeric error means no error in the operation.
TIMEOUT <seconds>
Terminate the operation after a given total time has elapsed.
USERPWD <username>:<password>
Set username and password for operation.
HTTPHEADER <HTTP-header>
HTTP header for operation. Suboption can be repeated several times.
NETRC <level>
Specify whether the .netrc file is to be used for operation. If this option is not specified, the
value of the CMAKE_NETRC variable will be used instead. Valid levels are:
IGNORED
The .netrc file is ignored. This is the default.
OPTIONAL
The .netrc file is optional, and information in the URL is preferred. The file will be
scanned to find which ever information is not specified in the URL.
REQUIRED
The .netrc file is required, and information in the URL is ignored.
NETRC_FILE <file>
Specify an alternative .netrc file to the one in your home directory, if the NETRC level is
OPTIONAL or REQUIRED. If this option is not specified, the value of the CMAKE_NETRC_FILE variable
will be used instead.
If neither NETRC option is given CMake will check variables CMAKE_NETRC and CMAKE_NETRC_FILE,
respectively.
Additional options to DOWNLOAD are:
EXPECTED_HASH ALGO=<value>
Verify that the downloaded content hash matches the expected value, where ALGO is one of the
algorithms supported by file(<HASH>). If it does not match, the operation fails with an error.
EXPECTED_MD5 <value>
Historical short-hand for EXPECTED_HASH MD5=<value>.
TLS_VERIFY <ON|OFF>
Specify whether to verify the server certificate for https:// URLs. The default is to not verify.
TLS_CAINFO <file>
Specify a custom Certificate Authority file for https:// URLs.
For https:// URLs CMake must be built with OpenSSL support. TLS/SSL certificates are not checked by
default. Set TLS_VERIFY to ON to check certificates and/or use EXPECTED_HASH to verify downloaded
content. If neither TLS option is given CMake will check variables CMAKE_TLS_VERIFY and
CMAKE_TLS_CAINFO, respectively.
Locking
file(LOCK <path> [DIRECTORY] [RELEASE]
[GUARD <FUNCTION|FILE|PROCESS>]
[RESULT_VARIABLE <variable>]
[TIMEOUT <seconds>])
Lock a file specified by <path> if no DIRECTORY option present and file <path>/cmake.lock otherwise. File
will be locked for scope defined by GUARD option (default value is PROCESS). RELEASE option can be used
to unlock file explicitly. If option TIMEOUT is not specified CMake will wait until lock succeed or until
fatal error occurs. If TIMEOUT is set to 0 lock will be tried once and result will be reported
immediately. If TIMEOUT is not 0 CMake will try to lock file for the period specified by <seconds> value.
Any errors will be interpreted as fatal if there is no RESULT_VARIABLE option. Otherwise result will be
stored in <variable> and will be 0 on success or error message on failure.
Note that lock is advisory - there is no guarantee that other processes will respect this lock, i.e. lock
synchronize two or more CMake instances sharing some modifiable resources. Similar logic applied to
DIRECTORY option - locking parent directory doesn’t prevent other LOCK commands to lock any child
directory or file.
Trying to lock file twice is not allowed. Any intermediate directories and file itself will be created
if they not exist. GUARD and TIMEOUT options ignored on RELEASE operation.
find_file
A short-hand signature is:
find_file (<VAR> name1 [path1 path2 ...])
The general signature is:
find_file (
<VAR>
name | NAMES name1 [name2 ...]
[HINTS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATHS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
[DOC "cache documentation string"]
[NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
[NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
[CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH]
)
This command is used to find a full path to named file. A cache entry named by <VAR> is created to store
the result of this command. If the full path to a file is found the result is stored in the variable and
the search will not be repeated unless the variable is cleared. If nothing is found, the result will be
<VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the search will be attempted again the next time find_file is invoked with the same
variable.
Options include:
NAMES Specify one or more possible names for the full path to a file.
When using this to specify names with and without a version suffix, we recommend specifying the
unversioned name first so that locally-built packages can be found before those provided by
distributions.
HINTS, PATHS
Specify directories to search in addition to the default locations. The ENV var sub-option reads
paths from a system environment variable.
PATH_SUFFIXES
Specify additional subdirectories to check below each directory location otherwise considered.
DOC Specify the documentation string for the <VAR> cache entry.
If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is specified, then no additional paths are added to the search. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is
not specified, the search process is as follows:
1. If called from within a find module or any other script loaded by a call to
find_package(<PackageName>), search prefixes unique to the current package being found. Specifically,
look in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable. The
package root variables are maintained as a stack, so if called from nested find modules or config
packages, root paths from the parent’s find module or config package will be searched after paths from
the current module or package. In other words, the search order would be <CurrentPackage>_ROOT,
ENV{<CurrentPackage>_ROOT}, <ParentPackage>_ROOT, ENV{<ParentPackage>_ROOT}, etc. This can be skipped
if NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH to FALSE. See
policy CMP0074.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable if called
from within a find module loaded by find_package(<PackageName>)
2. Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the
command line with a -DVAR=value. The values are interpreted as semicolon-separated lists. This can
be skipped if NO_CMAKE_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
3. Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the
user’s shell configuration, and therefore use the host’s native path separator (; on Windows and : on
UNIX). This can be skipped if NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH is passed or by setting the
CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
4. Search the paths specified by the HINTS option. These should be paths computed by system
introspection, such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded
guesses should be specified with the PATHS option.
5. Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• The directories in PATH and INCLUDE.
• On Windows hosts: <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include
for each <prefix>/[s]bin in PATH, and <entry>/include for other entries in PATH.
6. Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_FRAMEWORK_PATH
7. Search the paths specified by the PATHS option or in the short-hand version of the command. These are
typically hard-coded guesses.
On macOS the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference
between Apple-style and unix-style package components.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other
search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which
are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is
always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting
CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target
environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted
directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using
options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH
Search in the order described above.
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Do not use the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH variable.
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX.
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases.
Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_file (<VAR> NAMES name PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_file (<VAR> NAMES name)
Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call
will search again.
find_library
A short-hand signature is:
find_library (<VAR> name1 [path1 path2 ...])
The general signature is:
find_library (
<VAR>
name | NAMES name1 [name2 ...] [NAMES_PER_DIR]
[HINTS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATHS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
[DOC "cache documentation string"]
[NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
[NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
[CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH]
)
This command is used to find a library. A cache entry named by <VAR> is created to store the result of
this command. If the library is found the result is stored in the variable and the search will not be
repeated unless the variable is cleared. If nothing is found, the result will be <VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the
search will be attempted again the next time find_library is invoked with the same variable.
Options include:
NAMES Specify one or more possible names for the library.
When using this to specify names with and without a version suffix, we recommend specifying the
unversioned name first so that locally-built packages can be found before those provided by
distributions.
HINTS, PATHS
Specify directories to search in addition to the default locations. The ENV var sub-option reads
paths from a system environment variable.
PATH_SUFFIXES
Specify additional subdirectories to check below each directory location otherwise considered.
DOC Specify the documentation string for the <VAR> cache entry.
If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is specified, then no additional paths are added to the search. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is
not specified, the search process is as follows:
1. If called from within a find module or any other script loaded by a call to
find_package(<PackageName>), search prefixes unique to the current package being found. Specifically,
look in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable. The
package root variables are maintained as a stack, so if called from nested find modules or config
packages, root paths from the parent’s find module or config package will be searched after paths from
the current module or package. In other words, the search order would be <CurrentPackage>_ROOT,
ENV{<CurrentPackage>_ROOT}, <ParentPackage>_ROOT, ENV{<ParentPackage>_ROOT}, etc. This can be skipped
if NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH to FALSE. See
policy CMP0074.
• <prefix>/lib/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/lib for each <prefix> in the
<PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable if called from
within a find module loaded by find_package(<PackageName>)
2. Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the
command line with a -DVAR=value. The values are interpreted as semicolon-separated lists. This can
be skipped if NO_CMAKE_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/lib/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/lib for each <prefix> in
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
3. Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the
user’s shell configuration, and therefore use the host’s native path separator (; on Windows and : on
UNIX). This can be skipped if NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH is passed or by setting the
CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/lib/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/lib for each <prefix> in
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
4. Search the paths specified by the HINTS option. These should be paths computed by system
introspection, such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded
guesses should be specified with the PATHS option.
5. Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• The directories in PATH and INCLUDE.
• On Windows hosts: <prefix>/lib/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/lib for
each <prefix>/[s]bin in PATH, and <entry>/lib for other entries in PATH.
6. Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/lib/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/lib for each <prefix> in
CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_LIBRARY_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_FRAMEWORK_PATH
7. Search the paths specified by the PATHS option or in the short-hand version of the command. These are
typically hard-coded guesses.
On macOS the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference
between Apple-style and unix-style package components.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other
search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which
are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is
always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting
CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target
environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted
directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_LIBRARY. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using
options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH
Search in the order described above.
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Do not use the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH variable.
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX.
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases.
Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_library (<VAR> NAMES name PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_library (<VAR> NAMES name)
Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call
will search again.
When more than one value is given to the NAMES option this command by default will consider one name at a
time and search every directory for it. The NAMES_PER_DIR option tells this command to consider one
directory at a time and search for all names in it.
Each library name given to the NAMES option is first considered as a library file name and then
considered with platform-specific prefixes (e.g. lib) and suffixes (e.g. .so). Therefore one may specify
library file names such as libfoo.a directly. This can be used to locate static libraries on UNIX-like
systems.
If the library found is a framework, then <VAR> will be set to the full path to the framework
<fullPath>/A.framework. When a full path to a framework is used as a library, CMake will use a
-framework A, and a -F<fullPath> to link the framework to the target.
If the CMAKE_FIND_LIBRARY_CUSTOM_LIB_SUFFIX variable is set all search paths will be tested as normal,
with the suffix appended, and with all matches of lib/ replaced with
lib${CMAKE_FIND_LIBRARY_CUSTOM_LIB_SUFFIX}/. This variable overrides the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB32_PATHS,
FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIBX32_PATHS, and FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB64_PATHS global properties.
If the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB32_PATHS global property is set all search paths will be tested as normal,
with 32/ appended, and with all matches of lib/ replaced with lib32/. This property is automatically set
for the platforms that are known to need it if at least one of the languages supported by the project()
command is enabled.
If the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIBX32_PATHS global property is set all search paths will be tested as normal,
with x32/ appended, and with all matches of lib/ replaced with libx32/. This property is automatically
set for the platforms that are known to need it if at least one of the languages supported by the
project() command is enabled.
If the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB64_PATHS global property is set all search paths will be tested as normal,
with 64/ appended, and with all matches of lib/ replaced with lib64/. This property is automatically set
for the platforms that are known to need it if at least one of the languages supported by the project()
command is enabled.
find_package
Find an external project, and load its settings.
Basic Signature and Module Mode
find_package(<PackageName> [version] [EXACT] [QUIET] [MODULE]
[REQUIRED] [[COMPONENTS] [components...]]
[OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS components...]
[NO_POLICY_SCOPE])
Finds and loads settings from an external project. <PackageName>_FOUND will be set to indicate whether
the package was found. When the package is found package-specific information is provided through
variables and Imported Targets documented by the package itself. The QUIET option disables informational
messages, including those indicating that the package cannot be found if it is not REQUIRED. The
REQUIRED option stops processing with an error message if the package cannot be found.
A package-specific list of required components may be listed after the COMPONENTS option (or after the
REQUIRED option if present). Additional optional components may be listed after OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS.
Available components and their influence on whether a package is considered to be found are defined by
the target package.
The [version] argument requests a version with which the package found should be compatible (format is
major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]]). The EXACT option requests that the version be matched exactly. If no
[version] and/or component list is given to a recursive invocation inside a find-module, the
corresponding arguments are forwarded automatically from the outer call (including the EXACT flag for
[version]). Version support is currently provided only on a package-by-package basis (see the Version
Selection section below).
See the cmake_policy() command documentation for discussion of the NO_POLICY_SCOPE option.
The command has two modes by which it searches for packages: “Module” mode and “Config” mode. The above
signature selects Module mode. If no module is found the command falls back to Config mode, described
below. This fall back is disabled if the MODULE option is given.
In Module mode, CMake searches for a file called Find<PackageName>.cmake. The file is first searched in
the CMAKE_MODULE_PATH, then among the Find Modules provided by the CMake installation. If the file is
found, it is read and processed by CMake. It is responsible for finding the package, checking the
version, and producing any needed messages. Some find-modules provide limited or no support for
versioning; check the module documentation.
If the MODULE option is not specfied in the above signature, CMake first searches for the package using
Module mode. Then, if the package is not found, it searches again using Config mode. A user may set the
variable CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_PREFER_CONFIG to TRUE to direct CMake first search using Config mode before
falling back to Module mode.
Full Signature and Config Mode
User code should generally look for packages using the above basic signature. The remainder of this
command documentation specifies the full command signature and details of the search process. Project
maintainers wishing to provide a package to be found by this command are encouraged to read on.
The complete Config mode command signature is
find_package(<PackageName> [version] [EXACT] [QUIET]
[REQUIRED] [[COMPONENTS] [components...]]
[OPTIONAL_COMPONENTS components...]
[CONFIG|NO_MODULE]
[NO_POLICY_SCOPE]
[NAMES name1 [name2 ...]]
[CONFIGS config1 [config2 ...]]
[HINTS path1 [path2 ... ]]
[PATHS path1 [path2 ... ]]
[PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
[NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
[NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PACKAGE_REGISTRY]
[NO_CMAKE_BUILDS_PATH] # Deprecated; does nothing.
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PACKAGE_REGISTRY]
[CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH])
The CONFIG option, the synonymous NO_MODULE option, or the use of options not specified in the basic
signature all enforce pure Config mode. In pure Config mode, the command skips Module mode search and
proceeds at once with Config mode search.
Config mode search attempts to locate a configuration file provided by the package to be found. A cache
entry called <PackageName>_DIR is created to hold the directory containing the file. By default the
command searches for a package with the name <PackageName>. If the NAMES option is given the names
following it are used instead of <PackageName>. The command searches for a file called
<PackageName>Config.cmake or <lower-case-package-name>-config.cmake for each name specified. A
replacement set of possible configuration file names may be given using the CONFIGS option. The search
procedure is specified below. Once found, the configuration file is read and processed by CMake. Since
the file is provided by the package it already knows the location of package contents. The full path to
the configuration file is stored in the cmake variable <PackageName>_CONFIG.
All configuration files which have been considered by CMake while searching for an installation of the
package with an appropriate version are stored in the cmake variable <PackageName>_CONSIDERED_CONFIGS,
the associated versions in <PackageName>_CONSIDERED_VERSIONS.
If the package configuration file cannot be found CMake will generate an error describing the problem
unless the QUIET argument is specified. If REQUIRED is specified and the package is not found a fatal
error is generated and the configure step stops executing. If <PackageName>_DIR has been set to a
directory not containing a configuration file CMake will ignore it and search from scratch.
Package maintainers providing CMake package configuration files are encouraged to name and install them
such that the Search Procedure outlined below will find them without requiring use of additional options.
Version Selection
When the [version] argument is given Config mode will only find a version of the package that claims
compatibility with the requested version (format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]]). If the EXACT option
is given only a version of the package claiming an exact match of the requested version may be found.
CMake does not establish any convention for the meaning of version numbers. Package version numbers are
checked by “version” files provided by the packages themselves. For a candidate package configuration
file <config-file>.cmake the corresponding version file is located next to it and named either
<config-file>-version.cmake or <config-file>Version.cmake. If no such version file is available then the
configuration file is assumed to not be compatible with any requested version. A basic version file
containing generic version matching code can be created using the CMakePackageConfigHelpers module. When
a version file is found it is loaded to check the requested version number. The version file is loaded
in a nested scope in which the following variables have been defined:
PACKAGE_FIND_NAME
the <PackageName>
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION
full requested version string
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION_MAJOR
major version if requested, else 0
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION_MINOR
minor version if requested, else 0
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION_PATCH
patch version if requested, else 0
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION_TWEAK
tweak version if requested, else 0
PACKAGE_FIND_VERSION_COUNT
number of version components, 0 to 4
The version file checks whether it satisfies the requested version and sets these variables:
PACKAGE_VERSION
full provided version string
PACKAGE_VERSION_EXACT
true if version is exact match
PACKAGE_VERSION_COMPATIBLE
true if version is compatible
PACKAGE_VERSION_UNSUITABLE
true if unsuitable as any version
These variables are checked by the find_package command to determine whether the configuration file
provides an acceptable version. They are not available after the find_package call returns. If the
version is acceptable the following variables are set:
<PackageName>_VERSION
full provided version string
<PackageName>_VERSION_MAJOR
major version if provided, else 0
<PackageName>_VERSION_MINOR
minor version if provided, else 0
<PackageName>_VERSION_PATCH
patch version if provided, else 0
<PackageName>_VERSION_TWEAK
tweak version if provided, else 0
<PackageName>_VERSION_COUNT
number of version components, 0 to 4
and the corresponding package configuration file is loaded. When multiple package configuration files
are available whose version files claim compatibility with the version requested it is unspecified which
one is chosen: unless the variable CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_SORT_ORDER is set no attempt is made to choose a
highest or closest version number.
To control the order in which find_package checks for compatibility use the two variables
CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_SORT_ORDER and CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_SORT_DIRECTION. For instance in order to select the
highest version one can set
SET(CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_SORT_ORDER NATURAL)
SET(CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_SORT_DIRECTION DEC)
before calling find_package.
Search Procedure
CMake constructs a set of possible installation prefixes for the package. Under each prefix several
directories are searched for a configuration file. The tables below show the directories searched. Each
entry is meant for installation trees following Windows (W), UNIX (U), or Apple (A) conventions:
<prefix>/ (W)
<prefix>/(cmake|CMake)/ (W)
<prefix>/<name>*/ (W)
<prefix>/<name>*/(cmake|CMake)/ (W)
<prefix>/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/cmake/<name>*/ (U)
<prefix>/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/<name>*/ (U)
<prefix>/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/<name>*/(cmake|CMake)/ (U)
<prefix>/<name>*/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/cmake/<name>*/ (W/U)
<prefix>/<name>*/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/<name>*/ (W/U)
<prefix>/<name>*/(lib/<arch>|lib*|share)/<name>*/(cmake|CMake)/ (W/U)
On systems supporting macOS FRAMEWORK and BUNDLE, the following directories are searched for Frameworks
or Application Bundles containing a configuration file:
<prefix>/<name>.framework/Resources/ (A)
<prefix>/<name>.framework/Resources/CMake/ (A)
<prefix>/<name>.framework/Versions/*/Resources/ (A)
<prefix>/<name>.framework/Versions/*/Resources/CMake/ (A)
<prefix>/<name>.app/Contents/Resources/ (A)
<prefix>/<name>.app/Contents/Resources/CMake/ (A)
In all cases the <name> is treated as case-insensitive and corresponds to any of the names specified
(<PackageName> or names given by NAMES).
Paths with lib/<arch> are enabled if the CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE variable is set. lib* includes one or
more of the values lib64, lib32, libx32 or lib (searched in that order).
• Paths with lib64 are searched on 64 bit platforms if the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB64_PATHS property is set
to TRUE.
• Paths with lib32 are searched on 32 bit platforms if the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIB32_PATHS property is set
to TRUE.
• Paths with libx32 are searched on platforms using the x32 ABI if the FIND_LIBRARY_USE_LIBX32_PATHS
property is set to TRUE.
• The lib path is always searched.
If PATH_SUFFIXES is specified, the suffixes are appended to each (W) or (U) directory entry one-by-one.
This set of directories is intended to work in cooperation with projects that provide configuration files
in their installation trees. Directories above marked with (W) are intended for installations on Windows
where the prefix may point at the top of an application’s installation directory. Those marked with (U)
are intended for installations on UNIX platforms where the prefix is shared by multiple packages. This
is merely a convention, so all (W) and (U) directories are still searched on all platforms. Directories
marked with (A) are intended for installations on Apple platforms. The CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and
CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference.
The set of installation prefixes is constructed using the following steps. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is
specified all NO_* options are enabled.
1. Search paths specified in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment
variable, where <PackageName> is the package to be found. The package root variables are maintained
as a stack so if called from within a find module, root paths from the parent’s find module will also
be searched after paths for the current package. This can be skipped if NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH is
passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH to FALSE. See policy CMP0074.
2. Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the
command line with a -DVAR=value. The values are interpreted as semicolon-separated lists. This can
be skipped if NO_CMAKE_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_PATH to FALSE:
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH
3. Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the
user’s shell configuration, and therefore use the host’s native path separator (; on Windows and : on
UNIX). This can be skipped if NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH is passed or by setting the
CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE:
<PackageName>_DIR
CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH
4. Search paths specified by the HINTS option. These should be paths computed by system introspection,
such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded guesses should be
specified with the PATHS option.
5. Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE. Path entries ending in
/bin or /sbin are automatically converted to their parent directories:
PATH
6. Search paths stored in the CMake User Package Registry. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_PACKAGE_REGISTRY is passed or by setting the variable CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_REGISTRY to
FALSE or the deprecated variable CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_NO_PACKAGE_REGISTRY to TRUE.
See the cmake-packages(7) manual for details on the user package registry.
7. Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH to FALSE:
CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH
CMAKE_SYSTEM_FRAMEWORK_PATH
CMAKE_SYSTEM_APPBUNDLE_PATH
8. Search paths stored in the CMake System Package Registry. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PACKAGE_REGISTRY is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_PACKAGE_REGISTRY
variable to FALSE or the deprecated variable CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_NO_SYSTEM_PACKAGE_REGISTRY to TRUE.
See the cmake-packages(7) manual for details on the system package registry.
9. Search paths specified by the PATHS option. These are typically hard-coded guesses.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other
search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which
are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is
always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting
CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target
environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted
directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_PACKAGE. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using
options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH
Search in the order described above.
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Do not use the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH variable.
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX.
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases.
Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_package (<PackageName> PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_package (<PackageName>)
Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call
will search again.
By default the value stored in the result variable will be the path at which the file is found. The
CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS variable may be set to TRUE before calling find_package in order to
resolve symbolic links and store the real path to the file.
Every non-REQUIRED find_package call can be disabled by setting the
CMAKE_DISABLE_FIND_PACKAGE_<PackageName> variable to TRUE.
Package File Interface Variables
When loading a find module or package configuration file find_package defines variables to provide
information about the call arguments (and restores their original state before returning):
CMAKE_FIND_PACKAGE_NAME
the <PackageName> which is searched for
<PackageName>_FIND_REQUIRED
true if REQUIRED option was given
<PackageName>_FIND_QUIETLY
true if QUIET option was given
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION
full requested version string
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_MAJOR
major version if requested, else 0
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_MINOR
minor version if requested, else 0
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_PATCH
patch version if requested, else 0
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_TWEAK
tweak version if requested, else 0
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_COUNT
number of version components, 0 to 4
<PackageName>_FIND_VERSION_EXACT
true if EXACT option was given
<PackageName>_FIND_COMPONENTS
list of requested components
<PackageName>_FIND_REQUIRED_<c>
true if component <c> is required, false if component <c> is optional
In Module mode the loaded find module is responsible to honor the request detailed by these variables;
see the find module for details. In Config mode find_package handles REQUIRED, QUIET, and [version]
options automatically but leaves it to the package configuration file to handle components in a way that
makes sense for the package. The package configuration file may set <PackageName>_FOUND to false to tell
find_package that component requirements are not satisfied.
find_path
A short-hand signature is:
find_path (<VAR> name1 [path1 path2 ...])
The general signature is:
find_path (
<VAR>
name | NAMES name1 [name2 ...]
[HINTS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATHS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
[DOC "cache documentation string"]
[NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
[NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
[CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH]
)
This command is used to find a directory containing the named file. A cache entry named by <VAR> is
created to store the result of this command. If the file in a directory is found the result is stored in
the variable and the search will not be repeated unless the variable is cleared. If nothing is found,
the result will be <VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the search will be attempted again the next time find_path is
invoked with the same variable.
Options include:
NAMES Specify one or more possible names for the file in a directory.
When using this to specify names with and without a version suffix, we recommend specifying the
unversioned name first so that locally-built packages can be found before those provided by
distributions.
HINTS, PATHS
Specify directories to search in addition to the default locations. The ENV var sub-option reads
paths from a system environment variable.
PATH_SUFFIXES
Specify additional subdirectories to check below each directory location otherwise considered.
DOC Specify the documentation string for the <VAR> cache entry.
If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is specified, then no additional paths are added to the search. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is
not specified, the search process is as follows:
1. If called from within a find module or any other script loaded by a call to
find_package(<PackageName>), search prefixes unique to the current package being found. Specifically,
look in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable. The
package root variables are maintained as a stack, so if called from nested find modules or config
packages, root paths from the parent’s find module or config package will be searched after paths from
the current module or package. In other words, the search order would be <CurrentPackage>_ROOT,
ENV{<CurrentPackage>_ROOT}, <ParentPackage>_ROOT, ENV{<ParentPackage>_ROOT}, etc. This can be skipped
if NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH to FALSE. See
policy CMP0074.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable if called
from within a find module loaded by find_package(<PackageName>)
2. Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the
command line with a -DVAR=value. The values are interpreted as semicolon-separated lists. This can
be skipped if NO_CMAKE_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
3. Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the
user’s shell configuration, and therefore use the host’s native path separator (; on Windows and : on
UNIX). This can be skipped if NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH is passed or by setting the
CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_FRAMEWORK_PATH
4. Search the paths specified by the HINTS option. These should be paths computed by system
introspection, such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded
guesses should be specified with the PATHS option.
5. Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• The directories in PATH and INCLUDE.
• On Windows hosts: <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include
for each <prefix>/[s]bin in PATH, and <entry>/include for other entries in PATH.
6. Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/include/<arch> if CMAKE_LIBRARY_ARCHITECTURE is set, and <prefix>/include for each <prefix>
in CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_INCLUDE_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_FRAMEWORK_PATH
7. Search the paths specified by the PATHS option or in the short-hand version of the command. These are
typically hard-coded guesses.
On macOS the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference
between Apple-style and unix-style package components.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other
search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which
are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is
always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting
CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target
environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted
directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_INCLUDE. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using
options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH
Search in the order described above.
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Do not use the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH variable.
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX.
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases.
Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_path (<VAR> NAMES name PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_path (<VAR> NAMES name)
Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call
will search again.
When searching for frameworks, if the file is specified as A/b.h, then the framework search will look for
A.framework/Headers/b.h. If that is found the path will be set to the path to the framework. CMake will
convert this to the correct -F option to include the file.
find_program
A short-hand signature is:
find_program (<VAR> name1 [path1 path2 ...])
The general signature is:
find_program (
<VAR>
name | NAMES name1 [name2 ...] [NAMES_PER_DIR]
[HINTS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATHS path1 [path2 ... ENV var]]
[PATH_SUFFIXES suffix1 [suffix2 ...]]
[DOC "cache documentation string"]
[NO_DEFAULT_PATH]
[NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH]
[NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH]
[CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH |
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH |
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH]
)
This command is used to find a program. A cache entry named by <VAR> is created to store the result of
this command. If the program is found the result is stored in the variable and the search will not be
repeated unless the variable is cleared. If nothing is found, the result will be <VAR>-NOTFOUND, and the
search will be attempted again the next time find_program is invoked with the same variable.
Options include:
NAMES Specify one or more possible names for the program.
When using this to specify names with and without a version suffix, we recommend specifying the
unversioned name first so that locally-built packages can be found before those provided by
distributions.
HINTS, PATHS
Specify directories to search in addition to the default locations. The ENV var sub-option reads
paths from a system environment variable.
PATH_SUFFIXES
Specify additional subdirectories to check below each directory location otherwise considered.
DOC Specify the documentation string for the <VAR> cache entry.
If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is specified, then no additional paths are added to the search. If NO_DEFAULT_PATH is
not specified, the search process is as follows:
1. If called from within a find module or any other script loaded by a call to
find_package(<PackageName>), search prefixes unique to the current package being found. Specifically,
look in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the <PackageName>_ROOT environment variable. The
package root variables are maintained as a stack, so if called from nested find modules or config
packages, root paths from the parent’s find module or config package will be searched after paths from
the current module or package. In other words, the search order would be <CurrentPackage>_ROOT,
ENV{<CurrentPackage>_ROOT}, <ParentPackage>_ROOT, ENV{<ParentPackage>_ROOT}, etc. This can be skipped
if NO_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_PACKAGE_ROOT_PATH to FALSE. See
policy CMP0074.
• <prefix>/[s]bin for each <prefix> in the <PackageName>_ROOT CMake variable and the
<PackageName>_ROOT environment variable if called from within a find module loaded by
find_package(<PackageName>)
2. Search paths specified in cmake-specific cache variables. These are intended to be used on the
command line with a -DVAR=value. The values are interpreted as semicolon-separated lists. This can
be skipped if NO_CMAKE_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/[s]bin for each <prefix> in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_PROGRAM_PATH
• CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH
3. Search paths specified in cmake-specific environment variables. These are intended to be set in the
user’s shell configuration, and therefore use the host’s native path separator (; on Windows and : on
UNIX). This can be skipped if NO_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH is passed or by setting the
CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/[s]bin for each <prefix> in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_PROGRAM_PATH
• CMAKE_APPBUNDLE_PATH
4. Search the paths specified by the HINTS option. These should be paths computed by system
introspection, such as a hint provided by the location of another item already found. Hard-coded
guesses should be specified with the PATHS option.
5. Search the standard system environment variables. This can be skipped if NO_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH
is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_SYSTEM_ENVIRONMENT_PATH to FALSE.
• The directories in PATH itself.
• On Windows hosts no extra search paths are included
6. Search cmake variables defined in the Platform files for the current system. This can be skipped if
NO_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH is passed or by setting the CMAKE_FIND_USE_CMAKE_SYSTEM_PATH to FALSE.
• <prefix>/[s]bin for each <prefix> in CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_PROGRAM_PATH
• CMAKE_SYSTEM_APPBUNDLE_PATH
7. Search the paths specified by the PATHS option or in the short-hand version of the command. These are
typically hard-coded guesses.
On macOS the CMAKE_FIND_FRAMEWORK and CMAKE_FIND_APPBUNDLE variables determine the order of preference
between Apple-style and unix-style package components.
The CMake variable CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH specifies one or more directories to be prepended to all other
search directories. This effectively “re-roots” the entire search under given locations. Paths which
are descendants of the CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX are excluded from this re-rooting, because that variable is
always a path on the host system. By default the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH is empty.
The CMAKE_SYSROOT variable can also be used to specify exactly one directory to use as a prefix. Setting
CMAKE_SYSROOT also has other effects. See the documentation for that variable for more.
These variables are especially useful when cross-compiling to point to the root directory of the target
environment and CMake will search there too. By default at first the directories listed in
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH are searched, then the CMAKE_SYSROOT directory is searched, and then the non-rooted
directories will be searched. The default behavior can be adjusted by setting
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_MODE_PROGRAM. This behavior can be manually overridden on a per-call basis using
options:
CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH_BOTH
Search in the order described above.
NO_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Do not use the CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH variable.
ONLY_CMAKE_FIND_ROOT_PATH
Search only the re-rooted directories and directories below CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX.
The default search order is designed to be most-specific to least-specific for common use cases.
Projects may override the order by simply calling the command multiple times and using the NO_* options:
find_program (<VAR> NAMES name PATHS paths... NO_DEFAULT_PATH)
find_program (<VAR> NAMES name)
Once one of the calls succeeds the result variable will be set and stored in the cache so that no call
will search again.
When more than one value is given to the NAMES option this command by default will consider one name at a
time and search every directory for it. The NAMES_PER_DIR option tells this command to consider one
directory at a time and search for all names in it.
foreach
Evaluate a group of commands for each value in a list.
foreach(<loop_var> <items>)
<commands>
endforeach()
where <items> is a list of items that are separated by semicolon or whitespace. All commands between
foreach and the matching endforeach are recorded without being invoked. Once the endforeach is
evaluated, the recorded list of commands is invoked once for each item in <items>. At the beginning of
each iteration the variable loop_var will be set to the value of the current item.
The commands break() and continue() provide means to escape from the normal control flow.
Per legacy, the endforeach() command admits an optional <loop_var> argument. If used, it must be a
verbatim repeat of the argument of the opening foreach command.
foreach(<loop_var> RANGE <stop>)
In this variant, foreach iterates over the numbers 0, 1, … up to (and including) the nonnegative integer
<stop>.
foreach(<loop_var> RANGE <start> <stop> [<step>])
In this variant, foreach iterates over the numbers from <start> up to at most <stop> in steps of <step>.
If <step> is not specified, then the step size is 1. The three arguments <start> <stop> <step> must all
be nonnegative integers, and <stop> must not be smaller than <start>; otherwise you enter the danger zone
of undocumented behavior that may change in future releases.
foreach(loop_var IN [LISTS [<lists>]] [ITEMS [<items>]])
In this variant, <lists> is a whitespace or semicolon separated list of list-valued variables. The
foreach command iterates over each item in each given list. The <items> following the ITEMS keyword are
processed as in the first variant of the foreach command. The forms LISTS A and ITEMS ${A} are
equivalent.
The following example shows how the LISTS option is processed:
set(A 0;1)
set(B 2 3)
set(C "4 5")
set(D 6;7 8)
set(E "")
foreach(X IN LISTS A B C D E)
message(STATUS "X=${X}")
endforeach()
yields
-- X=0
-- X=1
-- X=2
-- X=3
-- X=4 5
-- X=6
-- X=7
-- X=8
function
Start recording a function for later invocation as a command.
function(<name> [<arg1> ...])
<commands>
endfunction()
Defines a function named <name> that takes arguments named <arg1>, … The <commands> in the function
definition are recorded; they are not executed until the function is invoked.
Per legacy, the endfunction() command admits an optional <name> argument. If used, it must be a verbatim
repeat of the argument of the opening function command.
A function opens a new scope: see set(var PARENT_SCOPE) for details.
See the cmake_policy() command documentation for the behavior of policies inside functions.
See the macro() command documentation for differences between CMake functions and macros.
Invocation
The function invocation is case-insensitive. A function defined as
function(foo)
<commands>
endfunction()
can be invoked through any of
foo()
Foo()
FOO()
and so on. However, it is strongly recommended to stay with the case chosen in the function definition.
Typically functions use all-lowercase names.
Arguments
When the function is invoked, the recorded <commands> are first modified by replacing formal parameters
(${arg1}, …) with the arguments passed, and then invoked as normal commands.
In addition to referencing the formal parameters you can reference the ARGC variable which will be set to
the number of arguments passed into the function as well as ARGV0, ARGV1, ARGV2, … which will have the
actual values of the arguments passed in. This facilitates creating functions with optional arguments.
Furthermore, ARGV holds the list of all arguments given to the function and ARGN holds the list of
arguments past the last expected argument. Referencing to ARGV# arguments beyond ARGC have undefined
behavior. Checking that ARGC is greater than # is the only way to ensure that ARGV# was passed to the
function as an extra argument.
get_cmake_property
Get a global property of the CMake instance.
get_cmake_property(<var> <property>)
Gets a global property from the CMake instance. The value of the <property> is stored in the variable
<var>. If the property is not found, <var> will be set to NOTFOUND. See the cmake-properties(7) manual
for available properties.
See also the get_property() command GLOBAL option.
In addition to global properties, this command (for historical reasons) also supports the VARIABLES and
MACROS directory properties. It also supports a special COMPONENTS global property that lists the
components given to the install() command.
get_directory_property
Get a property of DIRECTORY scope.
get_directory_property(<variable> [DIRECTORY <dir>] <prop-name>)
Stores a property of directory scope in the named <variable>. The DIRECTORY argument specifies another
directory from which to retrieve the property value instead of the current directory. The specified
directory must have already been traversed by CMake.
If the property is not defined for the nominated directory scope, an empty string is returned. In the
case of INHERITED properties, if the property is not found for the nominated directory scope, the search
will chain to a parent scope as described for the define_property() command.
get_directory_property(<variable> [DIRECTORY <dir>]
DEFINITION <var-name>)
Get a variable definition from a directory. This form is useful to get a variable definition from
another directory.
See also the more general get_property() command.
get_filename_component
Get a specific component of a full filename.
get_filename_component(<var> <FileName> <mode> [CACHE])
Sets <var> to a component of <FileName>, where <mode> is one of:
DIRECTORY = Directory without file name
NAME = File name without directory
EXT = File name longest extension (.b.c from d/a.b.c)
NAME_WE = File name without directory or longest extension
LAST_EXT = File name last extension (.c from d/a.b.c)
NAME_WLE = File name without directory or last extension
PATH = Legacy alias for DIRECTORY (use for CMake <= 2.8.11)
Paths are returned with forward slashes and have no trailing slashes. If the optional CACHE argument is
specified, the result variable is added to the cache.
get_filename_component(<var> <FileName> <mode> [BASE_DIR <dir>] [CACHE])
Sets <var> to the absolute path of <FileName>, where <mode> is one of:
ABSOLUTE = Full path to file
REALPATH = Full path to existing file with symlinks resolved
If the provided <FileName> is a relative path, it is evaluated relative to the given base directory
<dir>. If no base directory is provided, the default base directory will be CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR.
Paths are returned with forward slashes and have no trailing slashes. If the optional CACHE argument is
specified, the result variable is added to the cache.
get_filename_component(<var> <FileName> PROGRAM [PROGRAM_ARGS <arg_var>] [CACHE])
The program in <FileName> will be found in the system search path or left as a full path. If
PROGRAM_ARGS is present with PROGRAM, then any command-line arguments present in the <FileName> string
are split from the program name and stored in <arg_var>. This is used to separate a program name from
its arguments in a command line string.
get_property
Get a property.
get_property(<variable>
<GLOBAL |
DIRECTORY [<dir>] |
TARGET <target> |
SOURCE <source> |
INSTALL <file> |
TEST <test> |
CACHE <entry> |
VARIABLE >
PROPERTY <name>
[SET | DEFINED | BRIEF_DOCS | FULL_DOCS])
Gets one property from one object in a scope.
The first argument specifies the variable in which to store the result. The second argument determines
the scope from which to get the property. It must be one of the following:
GLOBAL Scope is unique and does not accept a name.
DIRECTORY
Scope defaults to the current directory but another directory (already processed by CMake) may be
named by the full or relative path <dir>.
TARGET Scope must name one existing target.
SOURCE Scope must name one source file.
INSTALL
Scope must name one installed file path.
TEST Scope must name one existing test.
CACHE Scope must name one cache entry.
VARIABLE
Scope is unique and does not accept a name.
The required PROPERTY option is immediately followed by the name of the property to get. If the property
is not set an empty value is returned, although some properties support inheriting from a parent scope if
defined to behave that way (see define_property()).
If the SET option is given the variable is set to a boolean value indicating whether the property has
been set. If the DEFINED option is given the variable is set to a boolean value indicating whether the
property has been defined such as with the define_property() command.
If BRIEF_DOCS or FULL_DOCS is given then the variable is set to a string containing documentation for the
requested property. If documentation is requested for a property that has not been defined NOTFOUND is
returned.
if
Conditionally execute a group of commands.
Synopsis
if(<condition>)
<commands>
elseif(<condition>) # optional block, can be repeated
<commands>
else() # optional block
<commands>
endif()
Evaluates the condition argument of the if clause according to the Condition syntax described below. If
the result is true, then the commands in the if block are executed. Otherwise, optional elseif blocks
are processed in the same way. Finally, if no condition is true, commands in the optional else block are
executed.
Per legacy, the else() and endif() commands admit an optional <condition> argument. If used, it must be
a verbatim repeat of the argument of the opening if command.
Condition Syntax
The following syntax applies to the condition argument of the if, elseif and while() clauses.
Compound conditions are evaluated in the following order of precedence: Innermost parentheses are
evaluated first. Next come unary tests such as EXISTS, COMMAND, and DEFINED. Then binary tests such as
EQUAL, LESS, LESS_EQUAL, GREATER, GREATER_EQUAL, STREQUAL, STRLESS, STRLESS_EQUAL, STRGREATER,
STRGREATER_EQUAL, VERSION_EQUAL, VERSION_LESS, VERSION_LESS_EQUAL, VERSION_GREATER,
VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL, and MATCHES. Then the boolean operators in the order NOT, AND, and finally OR.
Possible conditions are:
if(<constant>)
True if the constant is 1, ON, YES, TRUE, Y, or a non-zero number. False if the constant is 0,
OFF, NO, FALSE, N, IGNORE, NOTFOUND, the empty string, or ends in the suffix -NOTFOUND. Named
boolean constants are case-insensitive. If the argument is not one of these specific constants,
it is treated as a variable or string and the following signature is used.
if(<variable|string>)
True if given a variable that is defined to a value that is not a false constant. False
otherwise. (Note macro arguments are not variables.)
if(NOT <condition>)
True if the condition is not true.
if(<cond1> AND <cond2>)
True if both conditions would be considered true individually.
if(<cond1> OR <cond2>)
True if either condition would be considered true individually.
if(COMMAND command-name)
True if the given name is a command, macro or function that can be invoked.
if(POLICY policy-id)
True if the given name is an existing policy (of the form CMP<NNNN>).
if(TARGET target-name)
True if the given name is an existing logical target name created by a call to the
add_executable(), add_library(), or add_custom_target() command that has already been invoked (in
any directory).
if(TEST test-name)
True if the given name is an existing test name created by the add_test() command.
if(EXISTS path-to-file-or-directory)
True if the named file or directory exists. Behavior is well-defined only for full paths.
Resolves symbolic links, i.e. if the named file or directory is a symbolic link, returns true if
the target of the symbolic link exists.
if(file1 IS_NEWER_THAN file2)
True if file1 is newer than file2 or if one of the two files doesn’t exist. Behavior is
well-defined only for full paths. If the file time stamps are exactly the same, an IS_NEWER_THAN
comparison returns true, so that any dependent build operations will occur in the event of a tie.
This includes the case of passing the same file name for both file1 and file2.
if(IS_DIRECTORY path-to-directory)
True if the given name is a directory. Behavior is well-defined only for full paths.
if(IS_SYMLINK file-name)
True if the given name is a symbolic link. Behavior is well-defined only for full paths.
if(IS_ABSOLUTE path)
True if the given path is an absolute path.
if(<variable|string> MATCHES regex)
True if the given string or variable’s value matches the given regular condition. See Regex
Specification for regex format. () groups are captured in CMAKE_MATCH_<n> variables.
if(<variable|string> LESS <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is a valid number and less than that on the right.
if(<variable|string> GREATER <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is a valid number and greater than that on the right.
if(<variable|string> EQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is a valid number and equal to that on the right.
if(<variable|string> LESS_EQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is a valid number and less than or equal to that on
the right.
if(<variable|string> GREATER_EQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is a valid number and greater than or equal to that
on the right.
if(<variable|string> STRLESS <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is lexicographically less than the string or variable
on the right.
if(<variable|string> STRGREATER <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is lexicographically greater than the string or
variable on the right.
if(<variable|string> STREQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is lexicographically equal to the string or variable
on the right.
if(<variable|string> STRLESS_EQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is lexicographically less than or equal to the string
or variable on the right.
if(<variable|string> STRGREATER_EQUAL <variable|string>)
True if the given string or variable’s value is lexicographically greater than or equal to the
string or variable on the right.
if(<variable|string> VERSION_LESS <variable|string>)
Component-wise integer version number comparison (version format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]],
omitted components are treated as zero). Any non-integer version component or non-integer
trailing part of a version component effectively truncates the string at that point.
if(<variable|string> VERSION_GREATER <variable|string>)
Component-wise integer version number comparison (version format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]],
omitted components are treated as zero). Any non-integer version component or non-integer
trailing part of a version component effectively truncates the string at that point.
if(<variable|string> VERSION_EQUAL <variable|string>)
Component-wise integer version number comparison (version format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]],
omitted components are treated as zero). Any non-integer version component or non-integer
trailing part of a version component effectively truncates the string at that point.
if(<variable|string> VERSION_LESS_EQUAL <variable|string>)
Component-wise integer version number comparison (version format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]],
omitted components are treated as zero). Any non-integer version component or non-integer
trailing part of a version component effectively truncates the string at that point.
if(<variable|string> VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL <variable|string>)
Component-wise integer version number comparison (version format is major[.minor[.patch[.tweak]]],
omitted components are treated as zero). Any non-integer version component or non-integer
trailing part of a version component effectively truncates the string at that point.
if(<variable|string> IN_LIST <variable>)
True if the given element is contained in the named list variable.
if(DEFINED <name>|CACHE{<name>}|ENV{<name>})
True if a variable, cache variable or environment variable with given <name> is defined. The value
of the variable does not matter. Note that macro arguments are not variables.
if((condition) AND (condition OR (condition)))
The conditions inside the parenthesis are evaluated first and then the remaining condition is
evaluated as in the previous examples. Where there are nested parenthesis the innermost are
evaluated as part of evaluating the condition that contains them.
Variable Expansion
The if command was written very early in CMake’s history, predating the ${} variable evaluation syntax,
and for convenience evaluates variables named by its arguments as shown in the above signatures. Note
that normal variable evaluation with ${} applies before the if command even receives the arguments.
Therefore code like
set(var1 OFF)
set(var2 "var1")
if(${var2})
appears to the if command as
if(var1)
and is evaluated according to the if(<variable>) case documented above. The result is OFF which is
false. However, if we remove the ${} from the example then the command sees
if(var2)
which is true because var2 is defined to var1 which is not a false constant.
Automatic evaluation applies in the other cases whenever the above-documented condition syntax accepts
<variable|string>:
• The left hand argument to MATCHES is first checked to see if it is a defined variable, if so the
variable’s value is used, otherwise the original value is used.
• If the left hand argument to MATCHES is missing it returns false without error
• Both left and right hand arguments to LESS, GREATER, EQUAL, LESS_EQUAL, and GREATER_EQUAL, are
independently tested to see if they are defined variables, if so their defined values are used
otherwise the original value is used.
• Both left and right hand arguments to STRLESS, STRGREATER, STREQUAL, STRLESS_EQUAL, and
STRGREATER_EQUAL are independently tested to see if they are defined variables, if so their defined
values are used otherwise the original value is used.
• Both left and right hand arguments to VERSION_LESS, VERSION_GREATER, VERSION_EQUAL, VERSION_LESS_EQUAL,
and VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL are independently tested to see if they are defined variables, if so their
defined values are used otherwise the original value is used.
• The right hand argument to NOT is tested to see if it is a boolean constant, if so the value is used,
otherwise it is assumed to be a variable and it is dereferenced.
• The left and right hand arguments to AND and OR are independently tested to see if they are boolean
constants, if so they are used as such, otherwise they are assumed to be variables and are
dereferenced.
To prevent ambiguity, potential variable or keyword names can be specified in a Quoted Argument or a
Bracket Argument. A quoted or bracketed variable or keyword will be interpreted as a string and not
dereferenced or interpreted. See policy CMP0054.
There is no automatic evaluation for environment or cache Variable References. Their values must be
referenced as $ENV{<name>} or $CACHE{<name>} wherever the above-documented condition syntax accepts
<variable|string>.
include
Load and run CMake code from a file or module.
include(<file|module> [OPTIONAL] [RESULT_VARIABLE <var>]
[NO_POLICY_SCOPE])
Loads and runs CMake code from the file given. Variable reads and writes access the scope of the caller
(dynamic scoping). If OPTIONAL is present, then no error is raised if the file does not exist. If
RESULT_VARIABLE is given the variable <var> will be set to the full filename which has been included or
NOTFOUND if it failed.
If a module is specified instead of a file, the file with name <modulename>.cmake is searched first in
CMAKE_MODULE_PATH, then in the CMake module directory. There is one exception to this: if the file which
calls include() is located itself in the CMake builtin module directory, then first the CMake builtin
module directory is searched and CMAKE_MODULE_PATH afterwards. See also policy CMP0017.
See the cmake_policy() command documentation for discussion of the NO_POLICY_SCOPE option.
include_guard
Provides an include guard for the file currently being processed by CMake.
include_guard([DIRECTORY|GLOBAL])
Sets up an include guard for the current CMake file (see the CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_FILE variable
documentation).
CMake will end its processing of the current file at the location of the include_guard() command if the
current file has already been processed for the applicable scope (see below). This provides functionality
similar to the include guards commonly used in source headers or to the #pragma once directive. If the
current file has been processed previously for the applicable scope, the effect is as though return() had
been called. Do not call this command from inside a function being defined within the current file.
An optional argument specifying the scope of the guard may be provided. Possible values for the option
are:
DIRECTORY
The include guard applies within the current directory and below. The file will only be included
once within this directory scope, but may be included again by other files outside of this
directory (i.e. a parent directory or another directory not pulled in by add_subdirectory() or
include() from the current file or its children).
GLOBAL The include guard applies globally to the whole build. The current file will only be included once
regardless of the scope.
If no arguments given, include_guard has the same scope as a variable, meaning that the include guard
effect is isolated by the most recent function scope or current directory if no inner function scopes
exist. In this case the command behavior is the same as:
if(__CURRENT_FILE_VAR__)
return()
endif()
set(__CURRENT_FILE_VAR__ TRUE)
list
List operations.
Synopsis
Reading
list(LENGTH <list> <out-var>)
list(GET <list> <element index> [<index> ...] <out-var>)
list(JOIN <list> <glue> <out-var>)
list(SUBLIST <list> <begin> <length> <out-var>)
Search
list(FIND <list> <value> <out-var>)
Modification
list(APPEND <list> [<element>...])
list(FILTER <list> {INCLUDE | EXCLUDE} REGEX <regex>)
list(INSERT <list> <index> [<element>...])
list(POP_BACK <list> [<out-var>...])
list(POP_FRONT <list> [<out-var>...])
list(PREPEND <list> [<element>...])
list(REMOVE_ITEM <list> <value>...)
list(REMOVE_AT <list> <index>...)
list(REMOVE_DUPLICATES <list>)
list(TRANSFORM <list> <ACTION> [...])
Ordering
list(REVERSE <list>)
list(SORT <list> [...])
Introduction
The list subcommands APPEND, INSERT, FILTER, PREPEND, POP_BACK, POP_FRONT, REMOVE_AT, REMOVE_ITEM,
REMOVE_DUPLICATES, REVERSE and SORT may create new values for the list within the current CMake variable
scope. Similar to the set() command, the LIST command creates new variable values in the current scope,
even if the list itself is actually defined in a parent scope. To propagate the results of these
operations upwards, use set() with PARENT_SCOPE, set() with CACHE INTERNAL, or some other means of value
propagation.
NOTE:
A list in cmake is a ; separated group of strings. To create a list the set command can be used. For
example, set(var a b c d e) creates a list with a;b;c;d;e, and set(var "a b c d e") creates a string
or a list with one item in it. (Note macro arguments are not variables, and therefore cannot be used
in LIST commands.)
NOTE:
When specifying index values, if <element index> is 0 or greater, it is indexed from the beginning of
the list, with 0 representing the first list element. If <element index> is -1 or lesser, it is
indexed from the end of the list, with -1 representing the last list element. Be careful when
counting with negative indices: they do not start from 0. -0 is equivalent to 0, the first list
element.
Reading
list(LENGTH <list> <output variable>)
Returns the list’s length.
list(GET <list> <element index> [<element index> ...] <output variable>)
Returns the list of elements specified by indices from the list.
list(JOIN <list> <glue> <output variable>)
Returns a string joining all list’s elements using the glue string. To join multiple strings, which are
not part of a list, use JOIN operator from string() command.
list(SUBLIST <list> <begin> <length> <output variable>)
Returns a sublist of the given list. If <length> is 0, an empty list will be returned. If <length> is
-1 or the list is smaller than <begin>+<length> then the remaining elements of the list starting at
<begin> will be returned.
Search
list(FIND <list> <value> <output variable>)
Returns the index of the element specified in the list or -1 if it wasn’t found.
Modification
list(APPEND <list> [<element> ...])
Appends elements to the list.
list(FILTER <list> <INCLUDE|EXCLUDE> REGEX <regular_expression>)
Includes or removes items from the list that match the mode’s pattern. In REGEX mode, items will be
matched against the given regular expression.
For more information on regular expressions see also the string() command.
list(INSERT <list> <element_index> <element> [<element> ...])
Inserts elements to the list to the specified location.
list(POP_BACK <list> [<out-var>...])
If no variable name is given, removes exactly one element. Otherwise, assign the last element’s value to
the given variable and removes it, up to the last variable name given.
list(POP_FRONT <list> [<out-var>...])
If no variable name is given, removes exactly one element. Otherwise, assign the first element’s value to
the given variable and removes it, up to the last variable name given.
list(PREPEND <list> [<element> ...])
Insert elements to the 0th position in the list.
list(REMOVE_ITEM <list> <value> [<value> ...])
Removes all instances of the given items from the list.
list(REMOVE_AT <list> <index> [<index> ...])
Removes items at given indices from the list.
list(REMOVE_DUPLICATES <list>)
Removes duplicated items in the list. The relative order of items is preserved, but if duplicates are
encountered, only the first instance is preserved.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <ACTION> [<SELECTOR>]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <output variable>])
Transforms the list by applying an action to all or, by specifying a <SELECTOR>, to the selected elements
of the list, storing the result in-place or in the specified output variable.
NOTE:
The TRANSFORM sub-command does not change the number of elements in the list. If a <SELECTOR> is
specified, only some elements will be changed, the other ones will remain the same as before the
transformation.
<ACTION> specifies the action to apply to the elements of the list. The actions have exactly the same
semantics as sub-commands of the string() command. <ACTION> must be one of the following:
APPEND, PREPEND: Append, prepend specified value to each element of the list.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <APPEND|PREPEND> <value> ...)
TOUPPER, TOLOWER: Convert each element of the list to upper, lower characters.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <TOLOWER|TOUPPER> ...)
STRIP: Remove leading and trailing spaces from each element of the list.
list(TRANSFORM <list> STRIP ...)
GENEX_STRIP: Strip any generator expressions from each element of the list.
list(TRANSFORM <list> GENEX_STRIP ...)
REPLACE: Match the regular expression as many times as possible and substitute the replacement expression
for the match for each element of the list (Same semantic as REGEX REPLACE from string() command).
list(TRANSFORM <list> REPLACE <regular_expression>
<replace_expression> ...)
<SELECTOR> determines which elements of the list will be transformed. Only one type of selector can be
specified at a time. When given, <SELECTOR> must be one of the following:
AT: Specify a list of indexes.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <ACTION> AT <index> [<index> ...] ...)
FOR: Specify a range with, optionally, an increment used to iterate over the range.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <ACTION> FOR <start> <stop> [<step>] ...)
REGEX: Specify a regular expression. Only elements matching the regular expression will be transformed.
list(TRANSFORM <list> <ACTION> REGEX <regular_expression> ...)
Ordering
list(REVERSE <list>)
Reverses the contents of the list in-place.
list(SORT <list> [COMPARE <compare>] [CASE <case>] [ORDER <order>])
Sorts the list in-place alphabetically. Use the COMPARE keyword to select the comparison method for
sorting. The <compare> option should be one of:
• STRING: Sorts a list of strings alphabetically. This is the default behavior if the COMPARE option is
not given.
• FILE_BASENAME: Sorts a list of pathnames of files by their basenames.
Use the CASE keyword to select a case sensitive or case insensitive sort mode. The <case> option should
be one of:
• SENSITIVE: List items are sorted in a case-sensitive manner. This is the default behavior if the CASE
option is not given.
• INSENSITIVE: List items are sorted case insensitively. The order of items which differ only by
upper/lowercase is not specified.
To control the sort order, the ORDER keyword can be given. The <order> option should be one of:
• ASCENDING: Sorts the list in ascending order. This is the default behavior when the ORDER option is
not given.
• DESCENDING: Sorts the list in descending order.
macro
Start recording a macro for later invocation as a command
macro(<name> [<arg1> ...])
<commands>
endmacro()
Defines a macro named <name> that takes arguments named <arg1>, … Commands listed after macro, but before
the matching endmacro(), are not executed until the macro is invoked.
Per legacy, the endmacro() command admits an optional <name> argument. If used, it must be a verbatim
repeat of the argument of the opening macro command.
See the cmake_policy() command documentation for the behavior of policies inside macros.
See the Macro vs Function section below for differences between CMake macros and functions.
Invocation
The macro invocation is case-insensitive. A macro defined as
macro(foo)
<commands>
endmacro()
can be invoked through any of
foo()
Foo()
FOO()
and so on. However, it is strongly recommended to stay with the case chosen in the macro definition.
Typically macros use all-lowercase names.
Arguments
When a macro is invoked, the commands recorded in the macro are first modified by replacing formal
parameters (${arg1}, …) with the arguments passed, and then invoked as normal commands.
In addition to referencing the formal parameters you can reference the values ${ARGC} which will be set
to the number of arguments passed into the function as well as ${ARGV0}, ${ARGV1}, ${ARGV2}, … which
will have the actual values of the arguments passed in. This facilitates creating macros with optional
arguments.
Furthermore, ${ARGV} holds the list of all arguments given to the macro and ${ARGN} holds the list of
arguments past the last expected argument. Referencing to ${ARGV#} arguments beyond ${ARGC} have
undefined behavior. Checking that ${ARGC} is greater than # is the only way to ensure that ${ARGV#} was
passed to the function as an extra argument.
Macro vs Function
The macro command is very similar to the function() command. Nonetheless, there are a few important
differences.
In a function, ARGN, ARGC, ARGV and ARGV0, ARGV1, … are true variables in the usual CMake sense. In a
macro, they are not, they are string replacements much like the C preprocessor would do with a macro.
This has a number of consequences, as explained in the Argument Caveats section below.
Another difference between macros and functions is the control flow. A function is executed by
transferring control from the calling statement to the function body. A macro is executed as if the
macro body were pasted in place of the calling statement. This has the consequence that a return() in a
macro body does not just terminate execution of the macro; rather, control is returned from the scope of
the macro call. To avoid confusion, it is recommended to avoid return() in macros altogether.
Argument Caveats
Since ARGN, ARGC, ARGV, ARGV0 etc. are not variables, you will NOT be able to use commands like
if(ARGV1) # ARGV1 is not a variable
if(DEFINED ARGV2) # ARGV2 is not a variable
if(ARGC GREATER 2) # ARGC is not a variable
foreach(loop_var IN LISTS ARGN) # ARGN is not a variable
In the first case, you can use if(${ARGV1}). In the second and third case, the proper way to check if an
optional variable was passed to the macro is to use if(${ARGC} GREATER 2). In the last case, you can use
foreach(loop_var ${ARGN}) but this will skip empty arguments. If you need to include them, you can use
set(list_var "${ARGN}")
foreach(loop_var IN LISTS list_var)
Note that if you have a variable with the same name in the scope from which the macro is called, using
unreferenced names will use the existing variable instead of the arguments. For example:
macro(bar)
foreach(arg IN LISTS ARGN)
<commands>
endforeach()
endmacro()
function(foo)
bar(x y z)
endfunction()
foo(a b c)
Will loop over a;b;c and not over x;y;z as one might have expected. If you want true CMake variables
and/or better CMake scope control you should look at the function command.
mark_as_advanced
Mark cmake cached variables as advanced.
mark_as_advanced([CLEAR|FORCE] <var1> ...)
Sets the advanced/non-advanced state of the named cached variables.
An advanced variable will not be displayed in any of the cmake GUIs unless the show advanced option is
on. In script mode, the advanced/non-advanced state has no effect.
If the keyword CLEAR is given then advanced variables are changed back to unadvanced. If the keyword
FORCE is given then the variables are made advanced. If neither FORCE nor CLEAR is specified, new values
will be marked as advanced, but if a variable already has an advanced/non-advanced state, it will not be
changed.
math
Evaluate a mathematical expression.
math(EXPR <variable> "<expression>" [OUTPUT_FORMAT <format>])
Evaluates a mathematical <expression> and sets <variable> to the resulting value. The result of the
expression must be representable as a 64-bit signed integer.
The mathematical expression must be given as a string (i.e. enclosed in double quotation marks). An
example is "5 * (10 + 13)". Supported operators are +, -, *, /, %, |, &, ^, ~, <<, >>, and (...); they
have the same meaning as in C code.
Hexadecimal numbers are recognized when prefixed with 0x, as in C code.
The result is formatted according to the option OUTPUT_FORMAT, where <format> is one of
HEXADECIMAL
Hexadecimal notation as in C code, i. e. starting with “0x”.
DECIMAL
Decimal notation. Which is also used if no OUTPUT_FORMAT option is specified.
For example
math(EXPR value "100 * 0xA" OUTPUT_FORMAT DECIMAL) # value is set to "1000"
math(EXPR value "100 * 0xA" OUTPUT_FORMAT HEXADECIMAL) # value is set to "0x3e8"
message
Display a message to the user.
message([<mode>] "message to display" ...)
The optional <mode> keyword determines the type of message:
FATAL_ERROR
CMake Error, stop processing and generation.
SEND_ERROR
CMake Error, continue processing, but skip generation.
WARNING
CMake Warning, continue processing.
AUTHOR_WARNING
CMake Warning (dev), continue processing.
DEPRECATION
CMake Deprecation Error or Warning if variable CMAKE_ERROR_DEPRECATED or CMAKE_WARN_DEPRECATED is
enabled, respectively, else no message.
(none) or NOTICE
Important message printed to stderr to attract user’s attention.
STATUS The main interesting messages that project users might be interested in. Ideally these should be
concise, no more than a single line, but still informative.
VERBOSE
Detailed informational messages intended for project users. These messages should provide
additional details that won’t be of interest in most cases, but which may be useful to those
building the project when they want deeper insight into what’s happening.
DEBUG Detailed informational messages intended for developers working on the project itself as opposed
to users who just want to build it. These messages will not typically be of interest to other
users building the project and will often be closely related to internal implementation details.
TRACE Fine-grained messages with very low-level implementation details. Messages using this log level
would normally only be temporary and would expect to be removed before releasing the project,
packaging up the files, etc.
The CMake command-line tool displays STATUS to TRACE messages on stdout with the message preceded by two
hyphens and a space. All other message types are sent to stderr and are not prefixed with hyphens. The
CMake GUI displays all messages in its log area. The curses interface shows STATUS to TRACE messages one
at a time on a status line and other messages in an interactive pop-up box. The --log-level command-line
option to each of these tools can be used to control which messages will be shown.
Messages of log levels NOTICE and below will also have each line preceded by the content of the
CMAKE_MESSAGE_INDENT variable (converted to a single string by concatenating its list items). For STATUS
to TRACE messages, this indenting content will be inserted after the hyphens.
CMake Warning and Error message text displays using a simple markup language. Non-indented text is
formatted in line-wrapped paragraphs delimited by newlines. Indented text is considered pre-formatted.
option
Provide an option that the user can optionally select.
option(<variable> "<help_text>" [value])
Provides an option for the user to select as ON or OFF. If no initial <value> is provided, OFF is used.
If <variable> is already set as a normal variable then the command does nothing (see policy CMP0077).
If you have options that depend on the values of other options, see the module help for
CMakeDependentOption.
return
Return from a file, directory or function.
return()
Returns from a file, directory or function. When this command is encountered in an included file (via
include() or find_package()), it causes processing of the current file to stop and control is returned to
the including file. If it is encountered in a file which is not included by another file, e.g. a
CMakeLists.txt, control is returned to the parent directory if there is one. If return is called in a
function, control is returned to the caller of the function.
Note that a macro, unlike a function, is expanded in place and therefore cannot handle return().
separate_arguments
Parse command-line arguments into a semicolon-separated list.
separate_arguments(<variable> <mode> <args>)
Parses a space-separated string <args> into a list of items, and stores this list in semicolon-separated
standard form in <variable>.
This function is intended for parsing command-line arguments. The entire command line must be passed as
one string in the argument <args>.
The exact parsing rules depend on the operating system. They are specified by the <mode> argument which
must be one of the following keywords:
UNIX_COMMAND
Arguments are separated by by unquoted whitespace. Both single-quote and double-quote pairs are
respected. A backslash escapes the next literal character (\" is "); there are no special escapes
(\n is just n).
WINDOWS_COMMAND
A Windows command-line is parsed using the same syntax the runtime library uses to construct argv
at startup. It separates arguments by whitespace that is not double-quoted. Backslashes are
literal unless they precede double-quotes. See the MSDN article Parsing C Command-Line Arguments
for details.
NATIVE_COMMAND
Proceeds as in WINDOWS_COMMAND mode if the host system is Windows. Otherwise proceeds as in
UNIX_COMMAND mode.
separate_arguments(<var>)
Convert the value of <var> to a semi-colon separated list. All spaces are replaced with ‘;’. This helps
with generating command lines.
set
Set a normal, cache, or environment variable to a given value. See the cmake-language(7) variables
documentation for the scopes and interaction of normal variables and cache entries.
Signatures of this command that specify a <value>... placeholder expect zero or more arguments. Multiple
arguments will be joined as a semicolon-separated list to form the actual variable value to be set. Zero
arguments will cause normal variables to be unset. See the unset() command to unset variables
explicitly.
Set Normal Variable
set(<variable> <value>... [PARENT_SCOPE])
Sets the given <variable> in the current function or directory scope.
If the PARENT_SCOPE option is given the variable will be set in the scope above the current scope. Each
new directory or function creates a new scope. This command will set the value of a variable into the
parent directory or calling function (whichever is applicable to the case at hand). The previous state of
the variable’s value stays the same in the current scope (e.g., if it was undefined before, it is still
undefined and if it had a value, it is still that value).
Set Cache Entry
set(<variable> <value>... CACHE <type> <docstring> [FORCE])
Sets the given cache <variable> (cache entry). Since cache entries are meant to provide user-settable
values this does not overwrite existing cache entries by default. Use the FORCE option to overwrite
existing entries.
The <type> must be specified as one of:
BOOL Boolean ON/OFF value. cmake-gui(1) offers a checkbox.
FILEPATH
Path to a file on disk. cmake-gui(1) offers a file dialog.
PATH Path to a directory on disk. cmake-gui(1) offers a file dialog.
STRING A line of text. cmake-gui(1) offers a text field or a drop-down selection if the STRINGS cache
entry property is set.
INTERNAL
A line of text. cmake-gui(1) does not show internal entries. They may be used to store variables
persistently across runs. Use of this type implies FORCE.
The <docstring> must be specified as a line of text providing a quick summary of the option for
presentation to cmake-gui(1) users.
If the cache entry does not exist prior to the call or the FORCE option is given then the cache entry
will be set to the given value. Furthermore, any normal variable binding in the current scope will be
removed to expose the newly cached value to any immediately following evaluation.
It is possible for the cache entry to exist prior to the call but have no type set if it was created on
the cmake(1) command line by a user through the -D<var>=<value> option without specifying a type. In
this case the set command will add the type. Furthermore, if the <type> is PATH or FILEPATH and the
<value> provided on the command line is a relative path, then the set command will treat the path as
relative to the current working directory and convert it to an absolute path.
Set Environment Variable
set(ENV{<variable>} [<value>])
Sets an Environment Variable to the given value. Subsequent calls of $ENV{<variable>} will return this
new value.
This command affects only the current CMake process, not the process from which CMake was called, nor the
system environment at large, nor the environment of subsequent build or test processes.
If no argument is given after ENV{<variable>} or if <value> is an empty string, then this command will
clear any existing value of the environment variable.
Arguments after <value> are ignored. If extra arguments are found, then an author warning is issued.
set_directory_properties
Set properties of the current directory and subdirectories.
set_directory_properties(PROPERTIES prop1 value1 [prop2 value2] ...)
Sets properties of the current directory and its subdirectories in key-value pairs.
See also the set_property(DIRECTORY) command.
See Directory Properties for the list of properties known to CMake and their individual documentation for
the behavior of each property.
set_property
Set a named property in a given scope.
set_property(<GLOBAL |
DIRECTORY [<dir>] |
TARGET [<target1> ...] |
SOURCE [<src1> ...] |
INSTALL [<file1> ...] |
TEST [<test1> ...] |
CACHE [<entry1> ...] >
[APPEND] [APPEND_STRING]
PROPERTY <name> [value1 ...])
Sets one property on zero or more objects of a scope.
The first argument determines the scope in which the property is set. It must be one of the following:
GLOBAL Scope is unique and does not accept a name.
DIRECTORY
Scope defaults to the current directory but another directory (already processed by CMake) may be
named by full or relative path. See also the set_directory_properties() command.
TARGET Scope may name zero or more existing targets. See also the set_target_properties() command.
SOURCE Scope may name zero or more source files. Note that source file properties are visible only to
targets added in the same directory (CMakeLists.txt). See also the set_source_files_properties()
command.
INSTALL
Scope may name zero or more installed file paths. These are made available to CPack to influence
deployment.
Both the property key and value may use generator expressions. Specific properties may apply to
installed files and/or directories.
Path components have to be separated by forward slashes, must be normalized and are case
sensitive.
To reference the installation prefix itself with a relative path use ..
Currently installed file properties are only defined for the WIX generator where the given paths
are relative to the installation prefix.
TEST Scope may name zero or more existing tests. See also the set_tests_properties() command.
CACHE Scope must name zero or more cache existing entries.
The required PROPERTY option is immediately followed by the name of the property to set. Remaining
arguments are used to compose the property value in the form of a semicolon-separated list.
If the APPEND option is given the list is appended to any existing property value. If the APPEND_STRING
option is given the string is appended to any existing property value as string, i.e. it results in a
longer string and not a list of strings. When using APPEND or APPEND_STRING with a property defined to
support INHERITED behavior (see define_property()), no inheriting occurs when finding the initial value
to append to. If the property is not already directly set in the nominated scope, the command will
behave as though APPEND or APPEND_STRING had not been given.
See the cmake-properties(7) manual for a list of properties in each scope.
site_name
Set the given variable to the name of the computer.
site_name(variable)
string
String operations.
Synopsis
Search and Replace
string(FIND <string> <substring> <out-var> [...])
string(REPLACE <match-string> <replace-string> <out-var> <input>...)
Regular Expressions
string(REGEX MATCH <match-regex> <out-var> <input>...)
string(REGEX MATCHALL <match-regex> <out-var> <input>...)
string(REGEX REPLACE <match-regex> <replace-expr> <out-var> <input>...)
Manipulation
string(APPEND <string-var> [<input>...])
string(PREPEND <string-var> [<input>...])
string(CONCAT <out-var> [<input>...])
string(JOIN <glue> <out-var> [<input>...])
string(TOLOWER <string> <out-var>)
string(TOUPPER <string> <out-var>)
string(LENGTH <string> <out-var>)
string(SUBSTRING <string> <begin> <length> <out-var>)
string(STRIP <string> <out-var>)
string(GENEX_STRIP <string> <out-var>)
string(REPEAT <string> <count> <out-var>)
Comparison
string(COMPARE <op> <string1> <string2> <out-var>)
Hashing
string(<HASH> <out-var> <input>)
Generation
string(ASCII <number>... <out-var>)
string(CONFIGURE <string> <out-var> [...])
string(MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER <string> <out-var>)
string(RANDOM [<option>...] <out-var>)
string(TIMESTAMP <out-var> [<format string>] [UTC])
string(UUID <out-var> ...)
Search and Replace
string(FIND <string> <substring> <output_variable> [REVERSE])
Return the position where the given <substring> was found in the supplied <string>. If the REVERSE flag
was used, the command will search for the position of the last occurrence of the specified <substring>.
If the <substring> is not found, a position of -1 is returned.
The string(FIND) subcommand treats all strings as ASCII-only characters. The index stored in
<output_variable> will also be counted in bytes, so strings containing multi-byte characters may lead to
unexpected results.
string(REPLACE <match_string>
<replace_string> <output_variable>
<input> [<input>...])
Replace all occurrences of <match_string> in the <input> with <replace_string> and store the result in
the <output_variable>.
Regular Expressions
string(REGEX MATCH <regular_expression>
<output_variable> <input> [<input>...])
Match the <regular_expression> once and store the match in the <output_variable>. All <input> arguments
are concatenated before matching.
string(REGEX MATCHALL <regular_expression>
<output_variable> <input> [<input>...])
Match the <regular_expression> as many times as possible and store the matches in the <output_variable>
as a list. All <input> arguments are concatenated before matching.
string(REGEX REPLACE <regular_expression>
<replacement_expression> <output_variable>
<input> [<input>...])
Match the <regular_expression> as many times as possible and substitute the <replacement_expression> for
the match in the output. All <input> arguments are concatenated before matching.
The <replacement_expression> may refer to parenthesis-delimited subexpressions of the match using \1, \2,
…, \9. Note that two backslashes (\\1) are required in CMake code to get a backslash through argument
parsing.
Regex Specification
The following characters have special meaning in regular expressions:
^ Matches at beginning of input
$ Matches at end of input
. Matches any single character
\<char>
Matches the single character specified by <char>. Use this to match special regex characters,
e.g. \. for a literal . or \\ for a literal backslash \. Escaping a non-special character is
unnecessary but allowed, e.g. \a matches a.
[ ] Matches any character(s) inside the brackets
[^ ] Matches any character(s) not inside the brackets
- Inside brackets, specifies an inclusive range between characters on either side e.g. [a-f] is
[abcdef] To match a literal - using brackets, make it the first or the last character e.g. [+*/-]
matches basic mathematical operators.
* Matches preceding pattern zero or more times
+ Matches preceding pattern one or more times
? Matches preceding pattern zero or once only
| Matches a pattern on either side of the |
() Saves a matched subexpression, which can be referenced in the REGEX REPLACE operation.
Additionally it is saved by all regular expression-related commands, including e.g. if(MATCHES),
in the variables CMAKE_MATCH_<n> for <n> 0..9.
*, + and ? have higher precedence than concatenation. | has lower precedence than concatenation. This
means that the regular expression ^ab+d$ matches abbd but not ababd, and the regular expression ^(ab|cd)$
matches ab but not abd.
CMake language Escape Sequences such as \t, \r, \n, and \\ may be used to construct literal tabs,
carriage returns, newlines, and backslashes (respectively) to pass in a regex. For example:
• The quoted argument "[ \t\r\n]" specifies a regex that matches any single whitespace character.
• The quoted argument "[/\\]" specifies a regex that matches a single forward slash / or backslash \.
• The quoted argument "[A-Za-z0-9_]" specifies a regex that matches any single “word” character in the C
locale.
• The quoted argument "\\(\\a\\+b\\)" specifies a regex that matches the exact string (a+b). Each \\ is
parsed in a quoted argument as just \, so the regex itself is actually \(\a\+\b\). This can
alternatively be specified in a bracket argument without having to escape the backslashes, e.g.
[[\(\a\+\b\)]].
Manipulation
string(APPEND <string_variable> [<input>...])
Append all the <input> arguments to the string.
string(PREPEND <string_variable> [<input>...])
Prepend all the <input> arguments to the string.
string(CONCAT <output_variable> [<input>...])
Concatenate all the <input> arguments together and store the result in the named <output_variable>.
string(JOIN <glue> <output_variable> [<input>...])
Join all the <input> arguments together using the <glue> string and store the result in the named
<output_variable>.
To join a list’s elements, prefer to use the JOIN operator from the list() command. This allows for the
elements to have special characters like ; in them.
string(TOLOWER <string> <output_variable>)
Convert <string> to lower characters.
string(TOUPPER <string> <output_variable>)
Convert <string> to upper characters.
string(LENGTH <string> <output_variable>)
Store in an <output_variable> a given string’s length in bytes. Note that this means if <string>
contains multi-byte characters, the result stored in <output_variable> will not be the number of
characters.
string(SUBSTRING <string> <begin> <length> <output_variable>)
Store in an <output_variable> a substring of a given <string>. If <length> is -1 the remainder of the
string starting at <begin> will be returned. If <string> is shorter than <length> then the end of the
string is used instead.
Both <begin> and <length> are counted in bytes, so care must be exercised if <string> could contain
multi-byte characters.
NOTE:
CMake 3.1 and below reported an error if <length> pointed past the end of <string>.
string(STRIP <string> <output_variable>)
Store in an <output_variable> a substring of a given <string> with leading and trailing spaces removed.
string(GENEX_STRIP <string> <output_variable>)
Strip any generator expressions from the input <string> and store the result in the <output_variable>.
string(REPEAT <string> <count> <output_variable>)
Produce the output string as the input <string> repeated <count> times.
Comparison
string(COMPARE LESS <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
string(COMPARE GREATER <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
string(COMPARE EQUAL <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
string(COMPARE NOTEQUAL <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
string(COMPARE LESS_EQUAL <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
string(COMPARE GREATER_EQUAL <string1> <string2> <output_variable>)
Compare the strings and store true or false in the <output_variable>.
Hashing
string(<HASH> <output_variable> <input>)
Compute a cryptographic hash of the <input> string. The supported <HASH> algorithm names are:
MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm 5, RFC 1321.
SHA1 US Secure Hash Algorithm 1, RFC 3174.
SHA224 US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634.
SHA256 US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634.
SHA384 US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634.
SHA512 US Secure Hash Algorithms, RFC 4634.
SHA3_224
Keccak SHA-3.
SHA3_256
Keccak SHA-3.
SHA3_384
Keccak SHA-3.
SHA3_512
Keccak SHA-3.
Generation
string(ASCII <number> [<number> ...] <output_variable>)
Convert all numbers into corresponding ASCII characters.
string(CONFIGURE <string> <output_variable>
[@ONLY] [ESCAPE_QUOTES])
Transform a <string> like configure_file() transforms a file.
string(MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER <string> <output_variable>)
Convert each non-alphanumeric character in the input <string> to an underscore and store the result in
the <output_variable>. If the first character of the <string> is a digit, an underscore will also be
prepended to the result.
string(RANDOM [LENGTH <length>] [ALPHABET <alphabet>]
[RANDOM_SEED <seed>] <output_variable>)
Return a random string of given <length> consisting of characters from the given <alphabet>. Default
length is 5 characters and default alphabet is all numbers and upper and lower case letters. If an
integer RANDOM_SEED is given, its value will be used to seed the random number generator.
string(TIMESTAMP <output_variable> [<format_string>] [UTC])
Write a string representation of the current date and/or time to the <output_variable>.
If the command is unable to obtain a timestamp, the <output_variable> will be set to the empty string "".
The optional UTC flag requests the current date/time representation to be in Coordinated Universal Time
(UTC) rather than local time.
The optional <format_string> may contain the following format specifiers:
%% A literal percent sign (%).
%d The day of the current month (01-31).
%H The hour on a 24-hour clock (00-23).
%I The hour on a 12-hour clock (01-12).
%j The day of the current year (001-366).
%m The month of the current year (01-12).
%b Abbreviated month name (e.g. Oct).
%B Full month name (e.g. October).
%M The minute of the current hour (00-59).
%s Seconds since midnight (UTC) 1-Jan-1970 (UNIX time).
%S The second of the current minute.
60 represents a leap second. (00-60)
%U The week number of the current year (00-53).
%w The day of the current week. 0 is Sunday. (0-6)
%a Abbreviated weekday name (e.g. Fri).
%A Full weekday name (e.g. Friday).
%y The last two digits of the current year (00-99)
%Y The current year.
Unknown format specifiers will be ignored and copied to the output as-is.
If no explicit <format_string> is given, it will default to:
%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S for local time.
%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ for UTC.
NOTE:
If the SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH environment variable is set, its value will be used instead of the current
time. See https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/ for details.
string(UUID <output_variable> NAMESPACE <namespace> NAME <name>
TYPE <MD5|SHA1> [UPPER])
Create a universally unique identifier (aka GUID) as per RFC4122 based on the hash of the combined values
of <namespace> (which itself has to be a valid UUID) and <name>. The hash algorithm can be either MD5
(Version 3 UUID) or SHA1 (Version 5 UUID). A UUID has the format xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
where each x represents a lower case hexadecimal character. Where required, an uppercase representation
can be requested with the optional UPPER flag.
unset
Unset a variable, cache variable, or environment variable.
Unset Normal Variable or Cache Entry
unset(<variable> [CACHE | PARENT_SCOPE])
Removes a normal variable from the current scope, causing it to become undefined. If CACHE is present,
then a cache variable is removed instead of a normal variable. Note that when evaluating Variable
References of the form ${VAR}, CMake first searches for a normal variable with that name. If no such
normal variable exists, CMake will then search for a cache entry with that name. Because of this
unsetting a normal variable can expose a cache variable that was previously hidden. To force a variable
reference of the form ${VAR} to return an empty string, use set(<variable> ""), which clears the normal
variable but leaves it defined.
If PARENT_SCOPE is present then the variable is removed from the scope above the current scope. See the
same option in the set() command for further details.
Unset Environment Variable
unset(ENV{<variable>})
Removes <variable> from the currently available Environment Variables. Subsequent calls of
$ENV{<variable>} will return the empty string.
This command affects only the current CMake process, not the process from which CMake was called, nor the
system environment at large, nor the environment of subsequent build or test processes.
variable_watch
Watch the CMake variable for change.
variable_watch(<variable> [<command>])
If the specified <variable> changes, a message will be printed to inform about the change.
Additionally, if <command> is given, this command will be executed. The command will receive the
following arguments: COMMAND(<variable> <access> <value> <current_list_file> <stack>)
while
Evaluate a group of commands while a condition is true
while(<condition>)
<commands>
endwhile()
All commands between while and the matching endwhile() are recorded without being invoked. Once the
endwhile() is evaluated, the recorded list of commands is invoked as long as the <condition> is true.
The <condition> has the same syntax and is evaluated using the same logic as described at length for the
if() command.
The commands break() and continue() provide means to escape from the normal control flow.
Per legacy, the endwhile() command admits an optional <condition> argument. If used, it must be a
verbatim repeat of the argument of the opening while command.
PROJECT COMMANDS
These commands are available only in CMake projects.
add_compile_definitions
Add preprocessor definitions to the compilation of source files.
add_compile_definitions(<definition> ...)
Adds preprocessor definitions to the compiler command line for targets in the current directory and below
(whether added before or after this command is invoked). See documentation of the directory and target
COMPILE_DEFINITIONS properties.
Definitions are specified using the syntax VAR or VAR=value. Function-style definitions are not
supported. CMake will automatically escape the value correctly for the native build system (note that
CMake language syntax may require escapes to specify some values).
Arguments to add_compile_definitions may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
add_compile_options
Add options to the compilation of source files.
add_compile_options(<option> ...)
Adds options to the COMPILE_OPTIONS directory property. These options are used when compiling targets
from the current directory and below.
Arguments
Arguments to add_compile_options may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
The final set of compile or link options used for a target is constructed by accumulating options from
the current target and the usage requirements of its dependencies. The set of options is de-duplicated
to avoid repetition. While beneficial for individual options, the de-duplication step can break up
option groups. For example, -D A -D B becomes -D A B. One may specify a group of options using
shell-like quoting along with a SHELL: prefix. The SHELL: prefix is dropped, and the rest of the option
string is parsed using the separate_arguments() UNIX_COMMAND mode. For example, "SHELL:-D A" "SHELL:-D
B" becomes -D A -D B.
Example
Since different compilers support different options, a typical use of this command is in a
compiler-specific conditional clause:
if (MSVC)
# warning level 4 and all warnings as errors
add_compile_options(/W4 /WX)
else()
# lots of warnings and all warnings as errors
add_compile_options(-Wall -Wextra -pedantic -Werror)
endif()
See Also
This command can be used to add any options. However, for adding preprocessor definitions and include
directories it is recommended to use the more specific commands add_compile_definitions() and
include_directories().
The command target_compile_options() adds target-specific options.
add_custom_command
Add a custom build rule to the generated build system.
There are two main signatures for add_custom_command.
Generating Files
The first signature is for adding a custom command to produce an output:
add_custom_command(OUTPUT output1 [output2 ...]
COMMAND command1 [ARGS] [args1...]
[COMMAND command2 [ARGS] [args2...] ...]
[MAIN_DEPENDENCY depend]
[DEPENDS [depends...]]
[BYPRODUCTS [files...]]
[IMPLICIT_DEPENDS <lang1> depend1
[<lang2> depend2] ...]
[WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
[COMMENT comment]
[DEPFILE depfile]
[JOB_POOL job_pool]
[VERBATIM] [APPEND] [USES_TERMINAL]
[COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS])
This defines a command to generate specified OUTPUT file(s). A target created in the same directory
(CMakeLists.txt file) that specifies any output of the custom command as a source file is given a rule to
generate the file using the command at build time. Do not list the output in more than one independent
target that may build in parallel or the two instances of the rule may conflict (instead use the
add_custom_target() command to drive the command and make the other targets depend on that one). In
makefile terms this creates a new target in the following form:
OUTPUT: MAIN_DEPENDENCY DEPENDS
COMMAND
The options are:
APPEND Append the COMMAND and DEPENDS option values to the custom command for the first output specified.
There must have already been a previous call to this command with the same output. The COMMENT,
MAIN_DEPENDENCY, and WORKING_DIRECTORY options are currently ignored when APPEND is given, but may
be used in the future.
BYPRODUCTS
Specify the files the command is expected to produce but whose modification time may or may not be
newer than the dependencies. If a byproduct name is a relative path it will be interpreted
relative to the build tree directory corresponding to the current source directory. Each
byproduct file will be marked with the GENERATED source file property automatically.
Explicit specification of byproducts is supported by the Ninja generator to tell the ninja build
tool how to regenerate byproducts when they are missing. It is also useful when other build rules
(e.g. custom commands) depend on the byproducts. Ninja requires a build rule for any generated
file on which another rule depends even if there are order-only dependencies to ensure the
byproducts will be available before their dependents build.
COMMAND
Specify the command-line(s) to execute at build time. If more than one COMMAND is specified they
will be executed in order, but not necessarily composed into a stateful shell or batch script.
(To run a full script, use the configure_file() command or the file(GENERATE) command to create
it, and then specify a COMMAND to launch it.) The optional ARGS argument is for backward
compatibility and will be ignored.
If COMMAND specifies an executable target name (created by the add_executable() command), it will
automatically be replaced by the location of the executable created at build time if either of the
following is true:
• The target is not being cross-compiled (i.e. the CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING variable is not set to
true).
• The target is being cross-compiled and an emulator is provided (i.e. its
CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR target property is set). In this case, the contents of
CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR will be prepended to the command before the location of the target
executable.
If neither of the above conditions are met, it is assumed that the command name is a program to be
found on the PATH at build time.
Arguments to COMMAND may use generator expressions. Use the TARGET_FILE generator expression to
refer to the location of a target later in the command line (i.e. as a command argument rather
than as the command to execute).
Whenever a target is used as a command to execute or is mentioned in a generator expression as a
command argument, a target-level dependency will be added automatically so that the mentioned
target will be built before any target using this custom command. However this does NOT add a
file-level dependency that would cause the custom command to re-run whenever the executable is
recompiled. List target names with the DEPENDS option to add such file-level dependencies.
COMMENT
Display the given message before the commands are executed at build time.
DEPENDS
Specify files on which the command depends. If any dependency is an OUTPUT of another custom
command in the same directory (CMakeLists.txt file) CMake automatically brings the other custom
command into the target in which this command is built. A target-level dependency is added if any
dependency is listed as BYPRODUCTS of a target or any of its build events in the same directory to
ensure the byproducts will be available. If DEPENDS is not specified the command will run
whenever the OUTPUT is missing; if the command does not actually create the OUTPUT then the rule
will always run. If DEPENDS specifies any target (created by the add_custom_target(),
add_executable(), or add_library() command) a target-level dependency is created to make sure the
target is built before any target using this custom command. Additionally, if the target is an
executable or library a file-level dependency is created to cause the custom command to re-run
whenever the target is recompiled.
Arguments to DEPENDS may use generator expressions.
COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
Lists in COMMAND arguments will be expanded, including those created with generator expressions,
allowing COMMAND arguments such as ${CC}
"-I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:foo,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>,;-I>" foo.cc to be properly expanded.
IMPLICIT_DEPENDS
Request scanning of implicit dependencies of an input file. The language given specifies the
programming language whose corresponding dependency scanner should be used. Currently only C and
CXX language scanners are supported. The language has to be specified for every file in the
IMPLICIT_DEPENDS list. Dependencies discovered from the scanning are added to those of the custom
command at build time. Note that the IMPLICIT_DEPENDS option is currently supported only for
Makefile generators and will be ignored by other generators.
JOB_POOL
Specify a pool for the Ninja generator. Incompatible with USES_TERMINAL, which implies the console
pool. Using a pool that is not defined by JOB_POOLS causes an error by ninja at build time.
MAIN_DEPENDENCY
Specify the primary input source file to the command. This is treated just like any value given
to the DEPENDS option but also suggests to Visual Studio generators where to hang the custom
command. Each source file may have at most one command specifying it as its main dependency. A
compile command (i.e. for a library or an executable) counts as an implicit main dependency which
gets silently overwritten by a custom command specification.
OUTPUT Specify the output files the command is expected to produce. If an output name is a relative path
it will be interpreted relative to the build tree directory corresponding to the current source
directory. Each output file will be marked with the GENERATED source file property automatically.
If the output of the custom command is not actually created as a file on disk it should be marked
with the SYMBOLIC source file property.
USES_TERMINAL
The command will be given direct access to the terminal if possible. With the Ninja generator,
this places the command in the console pool.
VERBATIM
All arguments to the commands will be escaped properly for the build tool so that the invoked
command receives each argument unchanged. Note that one level of escapes is still used by the
CMake language processor before add_custom_command even sees the arguments. Use of VERBATIM is
recommended as it enables correct behavior. When VERBATIM is not given the behavior is platform
specific because there is no protection of tool-specific special characters.
WORKING_DIRECTORY
Execute the command with the given current working directory. If it is a relative path it will be
interpreted relative to the build tree directory corresponding to the current source directory.
Arguments to WORKING_DIRECTORY may use generator expressions.
DEPFILE
Specify a .d depfile for the Ninja generator. A .d file holds dependencies usually emitted by the
custom command itself. Using DEPFILE with other generators than Ninja is an error.
Build Events
The second signature adds a custom command to a target such as a library or executable. This is useful
for performing an operation before or after building the target. The command becomes part of the target
and will only execute when the target itself is built. If the target is already built, the command will
not execute.
add_custom_command(TARGET <target>
PRE_BUILD | PRE_LINK | POST_BUILD
COMMAND command1 [ARGS] [args1...]
[COMMAND command2 [ARGS] [args2...] ...]
[BYPRODUCTS [files...]]
[WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
[COMMENT comment]
[VERBATIM] [USES_TERMINAL]
[COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS])
This defines a new command that will be associated with building the specified <target>. The <target>
must be defined in the current directory; targets defined in other directories may not be specified.
When the command will happen is determined by which of the following is specified:
PRE_BUILD
On Visual Studio Generators, run before any other rules are executed within the target. On other
generators, run just before PRE_LINK commands.
PRE_LINK
Run after sources have been compiled but before linking the binary or running the librarian or
archiver tool of a static library. This is not defined for targets created by the
add_custom_target() command.
POST_BUILD
Run after all other rules within the target have been executed.
NOTE:
Because generator expressions can be used in custom commands, it is possible to define COMMAND lines
or whole custom commands which evaluate to empty strings for certain configurations. For Visual
Studio 2010 (and newer) generators these command lines or custom commands will be omitted for the
specific configuration and no “empty-string-command” will be added.
This allows to add individual build events for every configuration.
add_custom_target
Add a target with no output so it will always be built.
add_custom_target(Name [ALL] [command1 [args1...]]
[COMMAND command2 [args2...] ...]
[DEPENDS depend depend depend ... ]
[BYPRODUCTS [files...]]
[WORKING_DIRECTORY dir]
[COMMENT comment]
[JOB_POOL job_pool]
[VERBATIM] [USES_TERMINAL]
[COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS]
[SOURCES src1 [src2...]])
Adds a target with the given name that executes the given commands. The target has no output file and is
always considered out of date even if the commands try to create a file with the name of the target. Use
the add_custom_command() command to generate a file with dependencies. By default nothing depends on the
custom target. Use the add_dependencies() command to add dependencies to or from other targets.
The options are:
ALL Indicate that this target should be added to the default build target so that it will be run every
time (the command cannot be called ALL).
BYPRODUCTS
Specify the files the command is expected to produce but whose modification time may or may not be
updated on subsequent builds. If a byproduct name is a relative path it will be interpreted
relative to the build tree directory corresponding to the current source directory. Each
byproduct file will be marked with the GENERATED source file property automatically.
Explicit specification of byproducts is supported by the Ninja generator to tell the ninja build
tool how to regenerate byproducts when they are missing. It is also useful when other build rules
(e.g. custom commands) depend on the byproducts. Ninja requires a build rule for any generated
file on which another rule depends even if there are order-only dependencies to ensure the
byproducts will be available before their dependents build.
COMMAND
Specify the command-line(s) to execute at build time. If more than one COMMAND is specified they
will be executed in order, but not necessarily composed into a stateful shell or batch script.
(To run a full script, use the configure_file() command or the file(GENERATE) command to create
it, and then specify a COMMAND to launch it.)
If COMMAND specifies an executable target name (created by the add_executable() command), it will
automatically be replaced by the location of the executable created at build time if either of the
following is true:
• The target is not being cross-compiled (i.e. the CMAKE_CROSSCOMPILING variable is not set to
true).
• The target is being cross-compiled and an emulator is provided (i.e. its
CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR target property is set). In this case, the contents of
CROSSCOMPILING_EMULATOR will be prepended to the command before the location of the target
executable.
If neither of the above conditions are met, it is assumed that the command name is a program to be
found on the PATH at build time.
Arguments to COMMAND may use generator expressions. Use the TARGET_FILE generator expression to
refer to the location of a target later in the command line (i.e. as a command argument rather
than as the command to execute).
Whenever a target is used as a command to execute or is mentioned in a generator expression as a
command argument, a target-level dependency will be added automatically so that the mentioned
target will be built before this custom target.
The command and arguments are optional and if not specified an empty target will be created.
COMMENT
Display the given message before the commands are executed at build time.
DEPENDS
Reference files and outputs of custom commands created with add_custom_command() command calls in
the same directory (CMakeLists.txt file). They will be brought up to date when the target is
built. A target-level dependency is added if any dependency is a byproduct of a target or any of
its build events in the same directory to ensure the byproducts will be available before this
target is built.
Use the add_dependencies() command to add dependencies on other targets.
COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
Lists in COMMAND arguments will be expanded, including those created with generator expressions,
allowing COMMAND arguments such as ${CC}
"-I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:foo,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>,;-I>" foo.cc to be properly expanded.
JOB_POOL
Specify a pool for the Ninja generator. Incompatible with USES_TERMINAL, which implies the console
pool. Using a pool that is not defined by JOB_POOLS causes an error by ninja at build time.
SOURCES
Specify additional source files to be included in the custom target. Specified source files will
be added to IDE project files for convenience in editing even if they have no build rules.
VERBATIM
All arguments to the commands will be escaped properly for the build tool so that the invoked
command receives each argument unchanged. Note that one level of escapes is still used by the
CMake language processor before add_custom_target even sees the arguments. Use of VERBATIM is
recommended as it enables correct behavior. When VERBATIM is not given the behavior is platform
specific because there is no protection of tool-specific special characters.
USES_TERMINAL
The command will be given direct access to the terminal if possible. With the Ninja generator,
this places the command in the console pool.
WORKING_DIRECTORY
Execute the command with the given current working directory. If it is a relative path it will be
interpreted relative to the build tree directory corresponding to the current source directory.
Arguments to WORKING_DIRECTORY may use generator expressions.
add_definitions
Add -D define flags to the compilation of source files.
add_definitions(-DFOO -DBAR ...)
Adds definitions to the compiler command line for targets in the current directory and below (whether
added before or after this command is invoked). This command can be used to add any flags, but it is
intended to add preprocessor definitions.
NOTE:
This command has been superseded by alternatives:
• Use add_compile_definitions() to add preprocessor definitions.
• Use include_directories() to add include directories.
• Use add_compile_options() to add other options.
Flags beginning in -D or /D that look like preprocessor definitions are automatically added to the
COMPILE_DEFINITIONS directory property for the current directory. Definitions with non-trivial values
may be left in the set of flags instead of being converted for reasons of backwards compatibility. See
documentation of the directory, target, source file COMPILE_DEFINITIONS properties for details on adding
preprocessor definitions to specific scopes and configurations.
See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for more on defining buildsystem properties.
add_dependencies
Add a dependency between top-level targets.
add_dependencies(<target> [<target-dependency>]...)
Makes a top-level <target> depend on other top-level targets to ensure that they build before <target>
does. A top-level target is one created by one of the add_executable(), add_library(), or
add_custom_target() commands (but not targets generated by CMake like install).
Dependencies added to an imported target or an interface library are followed transitively in its place
since the target itself does not build.
See the DEPENDS option of add_custom_target() and add_custom_command() commands for adding file-level
dependencies in custom rules. See the OBJECT_DEPENDS source file property to add file-level dependencies
to object files.
add_executable
Add an executable to the project using the specified source files.
add_executable(<name> [WIN32] [MACOSX_BUNDLE]
[EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL]
[source1] [source2 ...])
Adds an executable target called <name> to be built from the source files listed in the command
invocation. (The source files can be omitted here if they are added later using target_sources().) The
<name> corresponds to the logical target name and must be globally unique within a project. The actual
file name of the executable built is constructed based on conventions of the native platform (such as
<name>.exe or just <name>).
By default the executable file will be created in the build tree directory corresponding to the source
tree directory in which the command was invoked. See documentation of the RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY
target property to change this location. See documentation of the OUTPUT_NAME target property to change
the <name> part of the final file name.
If WIN32 is given the property WIN32_EXECUTABLE will be set on the target created. See documentation of
that target property for details.
If MACOSX_BUNDLE is given the corresponding property will be set on the created target. See
documentation of the MACOSX_BUNDLE target property for details.
If EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL is given the corresponding property will be set on the created target. See
documentation of the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL target property for details.
Source arguments to add_executable may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
See also HEADER_FILE_ONLY on what to do if some sources are pre-processed, and you want to have the
original sources reachable from within IDE.
----
add_executable(<name> IMPORTED [GLOBAL])
An IMPORTED executable target references an executable file located outside the project. No rules are
generated to build it, and the IMPORTED target property is True. The target name has scope in the
directory in which it is created and below, but the GLOBAL option extends visibility. It may be
referenced like any target built within the project. IMPORTED executables are useful for convenient
reference from commands like add_custom_command(). Details about the imported executable are specified
by setting properties whose names begin in IMPORTED_. The most important such property is
IMPORTED_LOCATION (and its per-configuration version IMPORTED_LOCATION_<CONFIG>) which specifies the
location of the main executable file on disk. See documentation of the IMPORTED_* properties for more
information.
----
add_executable(<name> ALIAS <target>)
Creates an Alias Target, such that <name> can be used to refer to <target> in subsequent commands. The
<name> does not appear in the generated buildsystem as a make target. The <target> may not be a
non-GLOBAL Imported Target or an ALIAS. ALIAS targets can be used as targets to read properties from,
executables for custom commands and custom targets. They can also be tested for existence with the
regular if(TARGET) subcommand. The <name> may not be used to modify properties of <target>, that is, it
may not be used as the operand of set_property(), set_target_properties(), target_link_libraries() etc.
An ALIAS target may not be installed or exported.
add_library
Add a library to the project using the specified source files.
Normal Libraries
add_library(<name> [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE]
[EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL]
[source1] [source2 ...])
Adds a library target called <name> to be built from the source files listed in the command invocation.
(The source files can be omitted here if they are added later using target_sources().) The <name>
corresponds to the logical target name and must be globally unique within a project. The actual file
name of the library built is constructed based on conventions of the native platform (such as lib<name>.a
or <name>.lib).
STATIC, SHARED, or MODULE may be given to specify the type of library to be created. STATIC libraries
are archives of object files for use when linking other targets. SHARED libraries are linked dynamically
and loaded at runtime. MODULE libraries are plugins that are not linked into other targets but may be
loaded dynamically at runtime using dlopen-like functionality. If no type is given explicitly the type
is STATIC or SHARED based on whether the current value of the variable BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is ON. For
SHARED and MODULE libraries the POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE target property is set to ON automatically. A
SHARED or STATIC library may be marked with the FRAMEWORK target property to create an macOS Framework.
If a library does not export any symbols, it must not be declared as a SHARED library. For example, a
Windows resource DLL or a managed C++/CLI DLL that exports no unmanaged symbols would need to be a MODULE
library. This is because CMake expects a SHARED library to always have an associated import library on
Windows.
By default the library file will be created in the build tree directory corresponding to the source tree
directory in which the command was invoked. See documentation of the ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY,
LIBRARY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY, and RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY target properties to change this location. See
documentation of the OUTPUT_NAME target property to change the <name> part of the final file name.
If EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL is given the corresponding property will be set on the created target. See
documentation of the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL target property for details.
Source arguments to add_library may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
See also HEADER_FILE_ONLY on what to do if some sources are pre-processed, and you want to have the
original sources reachable from within IDE.
Imported Libraries
add_library(<name> <SHARED|STATIC|MODULE|OBJECT|UNKNOWN> IMPORTED
[GLOBAL])
An IMPORTED library target references a library file located outside the project. No rules are generated
to build it, and the IMPORTED target property is True. The target name has scope in the directory in
which it is created and below, but the GLOBAL option extends visibility. It may be referenced like any
target built within the project. IMPORTED libraries are useful for convenient reference from commands
like target_link_libraries(). Details about the imported library are specified by setting properties
whose names begin in IMPORTED_ and INTERFACE_.
The most important properties are:
• IMPORTED_LOCATION (and its per-configuration variant IMPORTED_LOCATION_<CONFIG>) which specifies the
location of the main library file on disk.
• IMPORTED_OBJECTS (and IMPORTED_OBJECTS_<CONFIG>) for object libraries, specifies the locations of
object files on disk.
• PUBLIC_HEADER files to be installed during install() invocation
See documentation of the IMPORTED_* and INTERFACE_* properties for more information.
An UNKNOWN library type is typically only used in the implementation of Find Modules. It allows the path
to an imported library (often found using the find_library() command) to be used without having to know
what type of library it is. This is especially useful on Windows where a static library and a DLL’s
import library both have the same file extension.
Object Libraries
add_library(<name> OBJECT <src>...)
Creates an Object Library. An object library compiles source files but does not archive or link their
object files into a library. Instead other targets created by add_library() or add_executable() may
reference the objects using an expression of the form $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib> as a source, where objlib
is the object library name. For example:
add_library(... $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib> ...)
add_executable(... $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib> ...)
will include objlib’s object files in a library and an executable along with those compiled from their
own sources. Object libraries may contain only sources that compile, header files, and other files that
would not affect linking of a normal library (e.g. .txt). They may contain custom commands generating
such sources, but not PRE_BUILD, PRE_LINK, or POST_BUILD commands. Some native build systems (such as
Xcode) may not like targets that have only object files, so consider adding at least one real source file
to any target that references $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib>.
Alias Libraries
add_library(<name> ALIAS <target>)
Creates an Alias Target, such that <name> can be used to refer to <target> in subsequent commands. The
<name> does not appear in the generated buildsystem as a make target. The <target> may not be a
non-GLOBAL Imported Target or an ALIAS. ALIAS targets can be used as linkable targets and as targets to
read properties from. They can also be tested for existence with the regular if(TARGET) subcommand. The
<name> may not be used to modify properties of <target>, that is, it may not be used as the operand of
set_property(), set_target_properties(), target_link_libraries() etc. An ALIAS target may not be
installed or exported.
Interface Libraries
add_library(<name> INTERFACE [IMPORTED [GLOBAL]])
Creates an Interface Library. An INTERFACE library target does not directly create build output, though
it may have properties set on it and it may be installed, exported and imported. Typically the
INTERFACE_* properties are populated on the interface target using the commands:
• set_property(),
• target_link_libraries(INTERFACE),
• target_link_options(INTERFACE),
• target_include_directories(INTERFACE),
• target_compile_options(INTERFACE),
• target_compile_definitions(INTERFACE), and
• target_sources(INTERFACE),
and then it is used as an argument to target_link_libraries() like any other target.
An INTERFACE Imported Target may also be created with this signature. An IMPORTED library target
references a library defined outside the project. The target name has scope in the directory in which it
is created and below, but the GLOBAL option extends visibility. It may be referenced like any target
built within the project. IMPORTED libraries are useful for convenient reference from commands like
target_link_libraries().
add_link_options
Add options to the link step for executable, shared library or module library targets in the current
directory and below that are added after this command is invoked.
add_link_options(<option> ...)
This command can be used to add any link options, but alternative commands exist to add libraries
(target_link_libraries() or link_libraries()). See documentation of the directory and target
LINK_OPTIONS properties.
NOTE:
This command cannot be used to add options for static library targets, since they do not use a linker.
To add archiver or MSVC librarian flags, see the STATIC_LIBRARY_OPTIONS target property.
Arguments to add_link_options may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
The final set of compile or link options used for a target is constructed by accumulating options from
the current target and the usage requirements of its dependencies. The set of options is de-duplicated
to avoid repetition. While beneficial for individual options, the de-duplication step can break up
option groups. For example, -D A -D B becomes -D A B. One may specify a group of options using
shell-like quoting along with a SHELL: prefix. The SHELL: prefix is dropped, and the rest of the option
string is parsed using the separate_arguments() UNIX_COMMAND mode. For example, "SHELL:-D A" "SHELL:-D
B" becomes -D A -D B.
To pass options to the linker tool, each compiler driver has its own syntax. The LINKER: prefix and ,
separator can be used to specify, in a portable way, options to pass to the linker tool. LINKER: is
replaced by the appropriate driver option and , by the appropriate driver separator. The driver prefix
and driver separator are given by the values of the CMAKE_<LANG>_LINKER_WRAPPER_FLAG and
CMAKE_<LANG>_LINKER_WRAPPER_FLAG_SEP variables.
For example, "LINKER:-z,defs" becomes -Xlinker -z -Xlinker defs for Clang and -Wl,-z,defs for GNU GCC.
The LINKER: prefix can be specified as part of a SHELL: prefix expression.
The LINKER: prefix supports, as an alternative syntax, specification of arguments using the SHELL: prefix
and space as separator. The previous example then becomes "LINKER:SHELL:-z defs".
NOTE:
Specifying the SHELL: prefix anywhere other than at the beginning of the LINKER: prefix is not
supported.
add_subdirectory
Add a subdirectory to the build.
add_subdirectory(source_dir [binary_dir] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL])
Adds a subdirectory to the build. The source_dir specifies the directory in which the source
CMakeLists.txt and code files are located. If it is a relative path it will be evaluated with respect to
the current directory (the typical usage), but it may also be an absolute path. The binary_dir specifies
the directory in which to place the output files. If it is a relative path it will be evaluated with
respect to the current output directory, but it may also be an absolute path. If binary_dir is not
specified, the value of source_dir, before expanding any relative path, will be used (the typical usage).
The CMakeLists.txt file in the specified source directory will be processed immediately by CMake before
processing in the current input file continues beyond this command.
If the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL argument is provided then targets in the subdirectory will not be included in the
ALL target of the parent directory by default, and will be excluded from IDE project files. Users must
explicitly build targets in the subdirectory. This is meant for use when the subdirectory contains a
separate part of the project that is useful but not necessary, such as a set of examples. Typically the
subdirectory should contain its own project() command invocation so that a full build system will be
generated in the subdirectory (such as a VS IDE solution file). Note that inter-target dependencies
supersede this exclusion. If a target built by the parent project depends on a target in the
subdirectory, the dependee target will be included in the parent project build system to satisfy the
dependency.
add_test
Add a test to the project to be run by ctest(1).
add_test(NAME <name> COMMAND <command> [<arg>...]
[CONFIGURATIONS <config>...]
[WORKING_DIRECTORY <dir>]
[COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS])
Adds a test called <name>. The test name may not contain spaces, quotes, or other characters special in
CMake syntax. The options are:
COMMAND
Specify the test command-line. If <command> specifies an executable target (created by
add_executable()) it will automatically be replaced by the location of the executable created at
build time.
CONFIGURATIONS
Restrict execution of the test only to the named configurations.
WORKING_DIRECTORY
Set the WORKING_DIRECTORY test property to specify the working directory in which to execute the
test. If not specified the test will be run with the current working directory set to the build
directory corresponding to the current source directory.
COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
Lists in COMMAND arguments will be expanded, including those created with generator expressions.
The given test command is expected to exit with code 0 to pass and non-zero to fail, or vice-versa if the
WILL_FAIL test property is set. Any output written to stdout or stderr will be captured by ctest(1) but
does not affect the pass/fail status unless the PASS_REGULAR_EXPRESSION, FAIL_REGULAR_EXPRESSION or
SKIP_REGULAR_EXPRESSION test property is used.
The COMMAND and WORKING_DIRECTORY options may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>. See
the cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions.
Example usage:
add_test(NAME mytest
COMMAND testDriver --config $<CONFIGURATION>
--exe $<TARGET_FILE:myexe>)
This creates a test mytest whose command runs a testDriver tool passing the configuration name and the
full path to the executable file produced by target myexe.
NOTE:
CMake will generate tests only if the enable_testing() command has been invoked. The CTest module
invokes the command automatically unless the BUILD_TESTING option is turned OFF.
----
add_test(<name> <command> [<arg>...])
Add a test called <name> with the given command-line. Unlike the above NAME signature no transformation
is performed on the command-line to support target names or generator expressions.
aux_source_directory
Find all source files in a directory.
aux_source_directory(<dir> <variable>)
Collects the names of all the source files in the specified directory and stores the list in the
<variable> provided. This command is intended to be used by projects that use explicit template
instantiation. Template instantiation files can be stored in a Templates subdirectory and collected
automatically using this command to avoid manually listing all instantiations.
It is tempting to use this command to avoid writing the list of source files for a library or executable
target. While this seems to work, there is no way for CMake to generate a build system that knows when a
new source file has been added. Normally the generated build system knows when it needs to rerun CMake
because the CMakeLists.txt file is modified to add a new source. When the source is just added to the
directory without modifying this file, one would have to manually rerun CMake to generate a build system
incorporating the new file.
build_command
Get a command line to build the current project. This is mainly intended for internal use by the CTest
module.
build_command(<variable>
[CONFIGURATION <config>]
[TARGET <target>]
[PROJECT_NAME <projname>] # legacy, causes warning
)
Sets the given <variable> to a command-line string of the form:
<cmake> --build . [--config <config>] [--target <target>...] [-- -i]
where <cmake> is the location of the cmake(1) command-line tool, and <config> and <target> are the values
provided to the CONFIGURATION and TARGET options, if any. The trailing -- -i option is added for
Makefile Generators if policy CMP0061 is not set to NEW.
When invoked, this cmake --build command line will launch the underlying build system tool.
build_command(<cachevariable> <makecommand>)
This second signature is deprecated, but still available for backwards compatibility. Use the first
signature instead.
It sets the given <cachevariable> to a command-line string as above but without the --target option. The
<makecommand> is ignored but should be the full path to devenv, nmake, make or one of the end user build
tools for legacy invocations.
NOTE:
In CMake versions prior to 3.0 this command returned a command line that directly invokes the native
build tool for the current generator. Their implementation of the PROJECT_NAME option had no useful
effects, so CMake now warns on use of the option.
create_test_sourcelist
Create a test driver and source list for building test programs.
create_test_sourcelist(sourceListName driverName
test1 test2 test3
EXTRA_INCLUDE include.h
FUNCTION function)
A test driver is a program that links together many small tests into a single executable. This is useful
when building static executables with large libraries to shrink the total required size. The list of
source files needed to build the test driver will be in sourceListName. driverName is the name of the
test driver program. The rest of the arguments consist of a list of test source files, can be semicolon
separated. Each test source file should have a function in it that is the same name as the file with no
extension (foo.cxx should have int foo(int, char*[]);) driverName will be able to call each of the tests
by name on the command line. If EXTRA_INCLUDE is specified, then the next argument is included into the
generated file. If FUNCTION is specified, then the next argument is taken as a function name that is
passed a pointer to ac and av. This can be used to add extra command line processing to each test. The
CMAKE_TESTDRIVER_BEFORE_TESTMAIN cmake variable can be set to have code that will be placed directly
before calling the test main function. CMAKE_TESTDRIVER_AFTER_TESTMAIN can be set to have code that will
be placed directly after the call to the test main function.
define_property
Define and document custom properties.
define_property(<GLOBAL | DIRECTORY | TARGET | SOURCE |
TEST | VARIABLE | CACHED_VARIABLE>
PROPERTY <name> [INHERITED]
BRIEF_DOCS <brief-doc> [docs...]
FULL_DOCS <full-doc> [docs...])
Defines one property in a scope for use with the set_property() and get_property() commands. This is
primarily useful to associate documentation with property names that may be retrieved with the
get_property() command. The first argument determines the kind of scope in which the property should be
used. It must be one of the following:
GLOBAL = associated with the global namespace
DIRECTORY = associated with one directory
TARGET = associated with one target
SOURCE = associated with one source file
TEST = associated with a test named with add_test
VARIABLE = documents a CMake language variable
CACHED_VARIABLE = documents a CMake cache variable
Note that unlike set_property() and get_property() no actual scope needs to be given; only the kind of
scope is important.
The required PROPERTY option is immediately followed by the name of the property being defined.
If the INHERITED option is given, then the get_property() command will chain up to the next higher scope
when the requested property is not set in the scope given to the command.
• DIRECTORY scope chains to its parent directory’s scope, continuing the walk up parent directories until
a directory has the property set or there are no more parents. If still not found at the top level
directory, it chains to the GLOBAL scope.
• TARGET, SOURCE and TEST properties chain to DIRECTORY scope, including further chaining up the
directories, etc. as needed.
Note that this scope chaining behavior only applies to calls to get_property(), get_directory_property(),
get_target_property(), get_source_file_property() and get_test_property(). There is no inheriting
behavior when setting properties, so using APPEND or APPEND_STRING with the set_property() command will
not consider inherited values when working out the contents to append to.
The BRIEF_DOCS and FULL_DOCS options are followed by strings to be associated with the property as its
brief and full documentation. Corresponding options to the get_property() command will retrieve the
documentation.
enable_language
Enable a language (CXX/C/OBJC/OBJCXX/Fortran/etc)
enable_language(<lang> [OPTIONAL] )
Enables support for the named language in CMake. This is the same as the project() command but does not
create any of the extra variables that are created by the project command. Example languages are CXX, C,
CUDA, OBJC, OBJCXX, Fortran, and ASM.
If enabling ASM, enable it last so that CMake can check whether compilers for other languages like C work
for assembly too.
This command must be called in file scope, not in a function call. Furthermore, it must be called in the
highest directory common to all targets using the named language directly for compiling sources or
indirectly through link dependencies. It is simplest to enable all needed languages in the top-level
directory of a project.
The OPTIONAL keyword is a placeholder for future implementation and does not currently work. Instead you
can use the CheckLanguage module to verify support before enabling.
enable_testing
Enable testing for current directory and below.
enable_testing()
Enables testing for this directory and below.
This command should be in the source directory root because ctest expects to find a test file in the
build directory root.
This command is automatically invoked when the CTest module is included, except if the BUILD_TESTING
option is turned off.
See also the add_test() command.
export
Export targets from the build tree for use by outside projects.
export(EXPORT <export-name> [NAMESPACE <namespace>] [FILE <filename>])
Creates a file <filename> that may be included by outside projects to import targets from the current
project’s build tree. This is useful during cross-compiling to build utility executables that can run on
the host platform in one project and then import them into another project being compiled for the target
platform. If the NAMESPACE option is given the <namespace> string will be prepended to all target names
written to the file.
Target installations are associated with the export <export-name> using the EXPORT option of the
install(TARGETS) command.
The file created by this command is specific to the build tree and should never be installed. See the
install(EXPORT) command to export targets from an installation tree.
The properties set on the generated IMPORTED targets will have the same values as the final values of the
input TARGETS.
export(TARGETS [target1 [target2 [...]]] [NAMESPACE <namespace>]
[APPEND] FILE <filename> [EXPORT_LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES])
This signature is similar to the EXPORT signature, but targets are listed explicitly rather than
specified as an export-name. If the APPEND option is given the generated code will be appended to the
file instead of overwriting it. The EXPORT_LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES keyword, if present, causes the
contents of the properties matching (IMPORTED_)?LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES(_<CONFIG>)? to be exported, when
policy CMP0022 is NEW. If a library target is included in the export but a target to which it links is
not included the behavior is unspecified.
NOTE:
Object Libraries under Xcode have special handling if multiple architectures are listed in
CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES. In this case they will be exported as Interface Libraries with no object
files available to clients. This is sufficient to satisfy transitive usage requirements of other
targets that link to the object libraries in their implementation.
export(PACKAGE <PackageName>)
Store the current build directory in the CMake user package registry for package <PackageName>. The
find_package() command may consider the directory while searching for package <PackageName>. This helps
dependent projects find and use a package from the current project’s build tree without help from the
user. Note that the entry in the package registry that this command creates works only in conjunction
with a package configuration file (<PackageName>Config.cmake) that works with the build tree. In some
cases, for example for packaging and for system wide installations, it is not desirable to write the user
package registry.
By default the export(PACKAGE) command does nothing (see policy CMP0090) because populating the user
package registry has effects outside the source and build trees. Set the CMAKE_EXPORT_PACKAGE_REGISTRY
variable to add build directories to the CMake user package registry.
export(TARGETS [target1 [target2 [...]]] [ANDROID_MK <filename>])
This signature exports cmake built targets to the android ndk build system by creating an Android.mk file
that references the prebuilt targets. The Android NDK supports the use of prebuilt libraries, both static
and shared. This allows cmake to build the libraries of a project and make them available to an ndk
build system complete with transitive dependencies, include flags and defines required to use the
libraries. The signature takes a list of targets and puts them in the Android.mk file specified by the
<filename> given. This signature can only be used if policy CMP0022 is NEW for all targets given. A error
will be issued if that policy is set to OLD for one of the targets.
fltk_wrap_ui
Create FLTK user interfaces Wrappers.
fltk_wrap_ui(resultingLibraryName source1
source2 ... sourceN )
Produce .h and .cxx files for all the .fl and .fld files listed. The resulting .h and .cxx files will be
added to a variable named resultingLibraryName_FLTK_UI_SRCS which should be added to your library.
get_source_file_property
Get a property for a source file.
get_source_file_property(VAR file property)
Gets a property from a source file. The value of the property is stored in the variable VAR. If the
source property is not found, the behavior depends on whether it has been defined to be an INHERITED
property or not (see define_property()). Non-inherited properties will set VAR to “NOTFOUND”, whereas
inherited properties will search the relevant parent scope as described for the define_property() command
and if still unable to find the property, VAR will be set to an empty string.
Use set_source_files_properties() to set property values. Source file properties usually control how the
file is built. One property that is always there is LOCATION.
See also the more general get_property() command.
get_target_property
Get a property from a target.
get_target_property(VAR target property)
Get a property from a target. The value of the property is stored in the variable VAR. If the target
property is not found, the behavior depends on whether it has been defined to be an INHERITED property or
not (see define_property()). Non-inherited properties will set VAR to NOTFOUND, whereas inherited
properties will search the relevant parent scope as described for the define_property() command and if
still unable to find the property, VAR will be set to an empty string.
Use set_target_properties() to set target property values. Properties are usually used to control how a
target is built, but some query the target instead. This command can get properties for any target so
far created. The targets do not need to be in the current CMakeLists.txt file.
See also the more general get_property() command.
See Target Properties for the list of properties known to CMake.
get_test_property
Get a property of the test.
get_test_property(test property VAR)
Get a property from the test. The value of the property is stored in the variable VAR. If the test
property is not found, the behavior depends on whether it has been defined to be an INHERITED property or
not (see define_property()). Non-inherited properties will set VAR to “NOTFOUND”, whereas inherited
properties will search the relevant parent scope as described for the define_property() command and if
still unable to find the property, VAR will be set to an empty string.
For a list of standard properties you can type cmake --help-property-list.
See also the more general get_property() command.
include_directories
Add include directories to the build.
include_directories([AFTER|BEFORE] [SYSTEM] dir1 [dir2 ...])
Add the given directories to those the compiler uses to search for include files. Relative paths are
interpreted as relative to the current source directory.
The include directories are added to the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property for the current
CMakeLists file. They are also added to the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES target property for each target in the
current CMakeLists file. The target property values are the ones used by the generators.
By default the directories specified are appended onto the current list of directories. This default
behavior can be changed by setting CMAKE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES_BEFORE to ON. By using AFTER or BEFORE
explicitly, you can select between appending and prepending, independent of the default.
If the SYSTEM option is given, the compiler will be told the directories are meant as system include
directories on some platforms. Signalling this setting might achieve effects such as the compiler
skipping warnings, or these fixed-install system files not being considered in dependency calculations -
see compiler docs.
Arguments to include_directories may use “generator expressions” with the syntax “$<…>”. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. See the cmake-buildsystem(7) manual for
more on defining buildsystem properties.
NOTE:
Prefer the target_include_directories() command to add include directories to individual targets and
optionally propagate/export them to dependents.
include_external_msproject
Include an external Microsoft project file in a workspace.
include_external_msproject(projectname location
[TYPE projectTypeGUID]
[GUID projectGUID]
[PLATFORM platformName]
dep1 dep2 ...)
Includes an external Microsoft project in the generated workspace file. Currently does nothing on UNIX.
This will create a target named [projectname]. This can be used in the add_dependencies() command to
make things depend on the external project.
TYPE, GUID and PLATFORM are optional parameters that allow one to specify the type of project, id (GUID)
of the project and the name of the target platform. This is useful for projects requiring values other
than the default (e.g. WIX projects).
If the imported project has different configuration names than the current project, set the
MAP_IMPORTED_CONFIG_<CONFIG> target property to specify the mapping.
include_regular_expression
Set the regular expression used for dependency checking.
include_regular_expression(regex_match [regex_complain])
Sets the regular expressions used in dependency checking. Only files matching regex_match will be traced
as dependencies. Only files matching regex_complain will generate warnings if they cannot be found
(standard header paths are not searched). The defaults are:
regex_match = "^.*$" (match everything)
regex_complain = "^$" (match empty string only)
install
Specify rules to run at install time.
Synopsis
install(TARGETS <target>... [...])
install({FILES | PROGRAMS} <file>... [...])
install(DIRECTORY <dir>... [...])
install(SCRIPT <file> [...])
install(CODE <code> [...])
install(EXPORT <export-name> [...])
Introduction
This command generates installation rules for a project. Rules specified by calls to this command within
a source directory are executed in order during installation. The order across directories is not
defined.
There are multiple signatures for this command. Some of them define installation options for files and
targets. Options common to multiple signatures are covered here but they are valid only for signatures
that specify them. The common options are:
DESTINATION
Specify the directory on disk to which a file will be installed. If a full path (with a leading
slash or drive letter) is given it is used directly. If a relative path is given it is
interpreted relative to the value of the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable. The prefix can be
relocated at install time using the DESTDIR mechanism explained in the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
variable documentation.
PERMISSIONS
Specify permissions for installed files. Valid permissions are OWNER_READ, OWNER_WRITE,
OWNER_EXECUTE, GROUP_READ, GROUP_WRITE, GROUP_EXECUTE, WORLD_READ, WORLD_WRITE, WORLD_EXECUTE,
SETUID, and SETGID. Permissions that do not make sense on certain platforms are ignored on those
platforms.
CONFIGURATIONS
Specify a list of build configurations for which the install rule applies (Debug, Release, etc.).
Note that the values specified for this option only apply to options listed AFTER the
CONFIGURATIONS option. For example, to set separate install paths for the Debug and Release
configurations, do the following:
install(TARGETS target
CONFIGURATIONS Debug
RUNTIME DESTINATION Debug/bin)
install(TARGETS target
CONFIGURATIONS Release
RUNTIME DESTINATION Release/bin)
Note that CONFIGURATIONS appears BEFORE RUNTIME DESTINATION.
COMPONENT
Specify an installation component name with which the install rule is associated, such as
“runtime” or “development”. During component-specific installation only install rules associated
with the given component name will be executed. During a full installation all components are
installed unless marked with EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL. If COMPONENT is not provided a default component
“Unspecified” is created. The default component name may be controlled with the
CMAKE_INSTALL_DEFAULT_COMPONENT_NAME variable.
EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL
Specify that the file is excluded from a full installation and only installed as part of a
component-specific installation
RENAME Specify a name for an installed file that may be different from the original file. Renaming is
allowed only when a single file is installed by the command.
OPTIONAL
Specify that it is not an error if the file to be installed does not exist.
Command signatures that install files may print messages during installation. Use the
CMAKE_INSTALL_MESSAGE variable to control which messages are printed.
Many of the install() variants implicitly create the directories containing the installed files. If
CMAKE_INSTALL_DEFAULT_DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS is set, these directories will be created with the
permissions specified. Otherwise, they will be created according to the uname rules on Unix-like
platforms. Windows platforms are unaffected.
Installing Targets
install(TARGETS targets... [EXPORT <export-name>]
[[ARCHIVE|LIBRARY|RUNTIME|OBJECTS|FRAMEWORK|BUNDLE|
PRIVATE_HEADER|PUBLIC_HEADER|RESOURCE]
[DESTINATION <dir>]
[PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[COMPONENT <component>]
[NAMELINK_COMPONENT <component>]
[OPTIONAL] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL]
[NAMELINK_ONLY|NAMELINK_SKIP]
] [...]
[INCLUDES DESTINATION [<dir> ...]]
)
The TARGETS form specifies rules for installing targets from a project. There are several kinds of
target files that may be installed:
ARCHIVE
Static libraries are treated as ARCHIVE targets, except those marked with the FRAMEWORK property
on macOS (see FRAMEWORK below.) For DLL platforms (all Windows-based systems including Cygwin),
the DLL import library is treated as an ARCHIVE target. On AIX, the linker import file created
for executables with ENABLE_EXPORTS is treated as an ARCHIVE target.
LIBRARY
Module libraries are always treated as LIBRARY targets. For non- DLL platforms shared libraries
are treated as LIBRARY targets, except those marked with the FRAMEWORK property on macOS (see
FRAMEWORK below.)
RUNTIME
Executables are treated as RUNTIME objects, except those marked with the MACOSX_BUNDLE property on
macOS (see BUNDLE below.) For DLL platforms (all Windows-based systems including Cygwin), the DLL
part of a shared library is treated as a RUNTIME target.
OBJECTS
Object libraries (a simple group of object files) are always treated as OBJECTS targets.
FRAMEWORK
Both static and shared libraries marked with the FRAMEWORK property are treated as FRAMEWORK
targets on macOS.
BUNDLE Executables marked with the MACOSX_BUNDLE property are treated as BUNDLE targets on macOS.
PUBLIC_HEADER
Any PUBLIC_HEADER files associated with a library are installed in the destination specified by
the PUBLIC_HEADER argument on non-Apple platforms. Rules defined by this argument are ignored for
FRAMEWORK libraries on Apple platforms because the associated files are installed into the
appropriate locations inside the framework folder. See PUBLIC_HEADER for details.
PRIVATE_HEADER
Similar to PUBLIC_HEADER, but for PRIVATE_HEADER files. See PRIVATE_HEADER for details.
RESOURCE
Similar to PUBLIC_HEADER and PRIVATE_HEADER, but for RESOURCE files. See RESOURCE for details.
For each of these arguments given, the arguments following them only apply to the target or file type
specified in the argument. If none is given, the installation properties apply to all target types. If
only one is given then only targets of that type will be installed (which can be used to install just a
DLL or just an import library.)
For regular executables, static libraries and shared libraries, the DESTINATION argument is not required.
For these target types, when DESTINATION is omitted, a default destination will be taken from the
appropriate variable from GNUInstallDirs, or set to a built-in default value if that variable is not
defined. The same is true for the public and private headers associated with the installed targets
through the PUBLIC_HEADER and PRIVATE_HEADER target properties. A destination must always be provided
for module libraries, Apple bundles and frameworks. A destination can be omitted for interface and
object libraries, but they are handled differently (see the discussion of this topic toward the end of
this section).
The following table shows the target types with their associated variables and built-in defaults that
apply when no destination is given:
┌────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┬──────────────────┐
│ Target Type │ GNUInstallDirs Variable │ Built-In Default │
├────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
│ RUNTIME │ ${CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR} │ bin │
├────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
│ LIBRARY │ ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR} │ lib │
├────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
│ ARCHIVE │ ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR} │ lib │
├────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
│ PRIVATE_HEADER │ ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR} │ include │
├────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
│ PUBLIC_HEADER │ ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR} │ include │
└────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┴──────────────────┘
Projects wishing to follow the common practice of installing headers into a project-specific subdirectory
will need to provide a destination rather than rely on the above.
To make packages compliant with distribution filesystem layout policies, if projects must specify a
DESTINATION, it is recommended that they use a path that begins with the appropriate GNUInstallDirs
variable. This allows package maintainers to control the install destination by setting the appropriate
cache variables. The following example shows a static library being installed to the default destination
provided by GNUInstallDirs, but with its headers installed to a project-specific subdirectory that
follows the above recommendation:
add_library(mylib STATIC ...)
set_target_properties(mylib PROPERTIES PUBLIC_HEADER mylib.h)
include(GNUInstallDirs)
install(TARGETS mylib
PUBLIC_HEADER
DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR}/myproj
)
In addition to the common options listed above, each target can accept the following additional
arguments:
NAMELINK_COMPONENT
On some platforms a versioned shared library has a symbolic link such as:
lib<name>.so -> lib<name>.so.1
where lib<name>.so.1 is the soname of the library and lib<name>.so is a “namelink” allowing
linkers to find the library when given -l<name>. The NAMELINK_COMPONENT option is similar to the
COMPONENT option, but it changes the installation component of a shared library namelink if one is
generated. If not specified, this defaults to the value of COMPONENT. It is an error to use this
parameter outside of a LIBRARY block.
Consider the following example:
install(TARGETS mylib
LIBRARY
COMPONENT Libraries
NAMELINK_COMPONENT Development
PUBLIC_HEADER
COMPONENT Development
)
In this scenario, if you choose to install only the Development component, both the headers and
namelink will be installed without the library. (If you don’t also install the Libraries
component, the namelink will be a dangling symlink, and projects that link to the library will
have build errors.) If you install only the Libraries component, only the library will be
installed, without the headers and namelink.
This option is typically used for package managers that have separate runtime and development
packages. For example, on Debian systems, the library is expected to be in the runtime package,
and the headers and namelink are expected to be in the development package.
See the VERSION and SOVERSION target properties for details on creating versioned shared
libraries.
NAMELINK_ONLY
This option causes the installation of only the namelink when a library target is installed. On
platforms where versioned shared libraries do not have namelinks or when a library is not
versioned, the NAMELINK_ONLY option installs nothing. It is an error to use this parameter outside
of a LIBRARY block.
When NAMELINK_ONLY is given, either NAMELINK_COMPONENT or COMPONENT may be used to specify the
installation component of the namelink, but COMPONENT should generally be preferred.
NAMELINK_SKIP
Similar to NAMELINK_ONLY, but it has the opposite effect: it causes the installation of library
files other than the namelink when a library target is installed. When neither NAMELINK_ONLY or
NAMELINK_SKIP are given, both portions are installed. On platforms where versioned shared
libraries do not have symlinks or when a library is not versioned, NAMELINK_SKIP installs the
library. It is an error to use this parameter outside of a LIBRARY block.
If NAMELINK_SKIP is specified, NAMELINK_COMPONENT has no effect. It is not recommended to use
NAMELINK_SKIP in conjunction with NAMELINK_COMPONENT.
The install(TARGETS) command can also accept the following options at the top level:
EXPORT This option associates the installed target files with an export called <export-name>. It must
appear before any target options. To actually install the export file itself, call
install(EXPORT), documented below. See documentation of the EXPORT_NAME target property to change
the name of the exported target.
INCLUDES DESTINATION
This option specifies a list of directories which will be added to the
INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES target property of the <targets> when exported by the
install(EXPORT) command. If a relative path is specified, it is treated as relative to the
$<INSTALL_PREFIX>.
One or more groups of properties may be specified in a single call to the TARGETS form of this command.
A target may be installed more than once to different locations. Consider hypothetical targets myExe,
mySharedLib, and myStaticLib. The code:
install(TARGETS myExe mySharedLib myStaticLib
RUNTIME DESTINATION bin
LIBRARY DESTINATION lib
ARCHIVE DESTINATION lib/static)
install(TARGETS mySharedLib DESTINATION /some/full/path)
will install myExe to <prefix>/bin and myStaticLib to <prefix>/lib/static. On non-DLL platforms
mySharedLib will be installed to <prefix>/lib and /some/full/path. On DLL platforms the mySharedLib DLL
will be installed to <prefix>/bin and /some/full/path and its import library will be installed to
<prefix>/lib/static and /some/full/path.
Interface Libraries may be listed among the targets to install. They install no artifacts but will be
included in an associated EXPORT. If Object Libraries are listed but given no destination for their
object files, they will be exported as Interface Libraries. This is sufficient to satisfy transitive
usage requirements of other targets that link to the object libraries in their implementation.
Installing a target with the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL target property set to TRUE has undefined behavior.
install(TARGETS) can install targets that were created in other directories. When using such
cross-directory install rules, running make install (or similar) from a subdirectory will not guarantee
that targets from other directories are up-to-date. You can use target_link_libraries() or
add_dependencies() to ensure that such out-of-directory targets are built before the
subdirectory-specific install rules are run.
An install destination given as a DESTINATION argument may use “generator expressions” with the syntax
$<...>. See the cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions.
Installing Files
install(<FILES|PROGRAMS> files...
TYPE <type> | DESTINATION <dir>
[PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[COMPONENT <component>]
[RENAME <name>] [OPTIONAL] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL])
The FILES form specifies rules for installing files for a project. File names given as relative paths
are interpreted with respect to the current source directory. Files installed by this form are by
default given permissions OWNER_WRITE, OWNER_READ, GROUP_READ, and WORLD_READ if no PERMISSIONS argument
is given.
The PROGRAMS form is identical to the FILES form except that the default permissions for the installed
file also include OWNER_EXECUTE, GROUP_EXECUTE, and WORLD_EXECUTE. This form is intended to install
programs that are not targets, such as shell scripts. Use the TARGETS form to install targets built
within the project.
The list of files... given to FILES or PROGRAMS may use “generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>.
See the cmake-generator-expressions(7) manual for available expressions. However, if any item begins in
a generator expression it must evaluate to a full path.
Either a TYPE or a DESTINATION must be provided, but not both. A TYPE argument specifies the generic
file type of the files being installed. A destination will then be set automatically by taking the
corresponding variable from GNUInstallDirs, or by using a built-in default if that variable is not
defined. See the table below for the supported file types and their corresponding variables and built-in
defaults. Projects can provide a DESTINATION argument instead of a file type if they wish to explicitly
define the install destination.
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
TYPE Argument GNUInstallDirs Variable Built-In Default
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
BIN ${CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR} bin
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
SBIN ${CMAKE_INSTALL_SBINDIR} sbin
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
LIB ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR} lib
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
INCLUDE ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INCLUDEDIR} include
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
SYSCONF ${CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSCONFDIR} etc
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
SHAREDSTATE ${CMAKE_INSTALL_SHARESTATEDIR} com
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
LOCALSTATE ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LOCALSTATEDIR} var
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
RUNSTATE ${CMAKE_INSTALL_RUNSTATEDIR} <LOCALSTATE dir>/run
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DATA ${CMAKE_INSTALL_DATADIR} <DATAROOT dir>
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
INFO ${CMAKE_INSTALL_INFODIR} <DATAROOT dir>/info
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
LOCALE ${CMAKE_INSTALL_LOCALEDIR} <DATAROOT dir>/locale
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
MAN ${CMAKE_INSTALL_MANDIR} <DATAROOT dir>/man
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DOC ${CMAKE_INSTALL_DOCDIR} <DATAROOT dir>/doc
┌───────────────┬────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
│ │ │ │
--
CTEST COMMANDS
These commands are available only in CTest scripts.
ctest_build
Perform the CTest Build Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_build([BUILD <build-dir>] [APPEND]
[CONFIGURATION <config>]
[FLAGS <flags>]
[PROJECT_NAME <project-name>]
[TARGET <target-name>]
[NUMBER_ERRORS <num-err-var>]
[NUMBER_WARNINGS <num-warn-var>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>]
)
Build the project and store results in Build.xml for submission with the ctest_submit() command.
The CTEST_BUILD_COMMAND variable may be set to explicitly specify the build command line. Otherwise the
build command line is computed automatically based on the options given.
The options are:
BUILD <build-dir>
Specify the top-level build directory. If not given, the CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY variable is used.
APPEND Mark Build.xml for append to results previously submitted to a dashboard server since the last
ctest_start() call. Append semantics are defined by the dashboard server in use. This does not
cause results to be appended to a .xml file produced by a previous call to this command.
CONFIGURATION <config>
Specify the build configuration (e.g. Debug). If not specified the CTEST_BUILD_CONFIGURATION
variable will be checked. Otherwise the -C <cfg> option given to the ctest(1) command will be
used, if any.
FLAGS <flags>
Pass additional arguments to the underlying build command. If not specified the CTEST_BUILD_FLAGS
variable will be checked. This can, e.g., be used to trigger a parallel build using the -j option
of make. See the ProcessorCount module for an example.
PROJECT_NAME <project-name>
Ignored. This was once used but is no longer needed.
TARGET <target-name>
Specify the name of a target to build. If not specified the CTEST_BUILD_TARGET variable will be
checked. Otherwise the default target will be built. This is the “all” target (called ALL_BUILD
in Visual Studio Generators).
NUMBER_ERRORS <num-err-var>
Store the number of build errors detected in the given variable.
NUMBER_WARNINGS <num-warn-var>
Store the number of build warnings detected in the given variable.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store the return value of the native build tool in the given variable.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Suppress any CTest-specific non-error output that would have been printed to the console
otherwise. The summary of warnings / errors, as well as the output from the native build tool is
unaffected by this option.
ctest_configure
Perform the CTest Configure Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_configure([BUILD <build-dir>] [SOURCE <source-dir>] [APPEND]
[OPTIONS <options>] [RETURN_VALUE <result-var>] [QUIET]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>])
Configure the project build tree and record results in Configure.xml for submission with the
ctest_submit() command.
The options are:
BUILD <build-dir>
Specify the top-level build directory. If not given, the CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY variable is used.
SOURCE <source-dir>
Specify the source directory. If not given, the CTEST_SOURCE_DIRECTORY variable is used.
APPEND Mark Configure.xml for append to results previously submitted to a dashboard server since the last
ctest_start() call. Append semantics are defined by the dashboard server in use. This does not
cause results to be appended to a .xml file produced by a previous call to this command.
OPTIONS <options>
Specify command-line arguments to pass to the configuration tool.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable the return value of the native configuration tool.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Suppress any CTest-specific non-error messages that would have otherwise been printed to the
console. Output from the underlying configure command is not affected.
ctest_coverage
Perform the CTest Coverage Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_coverage([BUILD <build-dir>] [APPEND]
[LABELS <label>...]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>]
[QUIET]
)
Collect coverage tool results and stores them in Coverage.xml for submission with the ctest_submit()
command.
The options are:
BUILD <build-dir>
Specify the top-level build directory. If not given, the CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY variable is used.
APPEND Mark Coverage.xml for append to results previously submitted to a dashboard server since the last
ctest_start() call. Append semantics are defined by the dashboard server in use. This does not
cause results to be appended to a .xml file produced by a previous call to this command.
LABELS Filter the coverage report to include only source files labeled with at least one of the labels
specified.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable 0 if coverage tools ran without error and non-zero otherwise.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Suppress any CTest-specific non-error output that would have been printed to the console
otherwise. The summary indicating how many lines of code were covered is unaffected by this
option.
ctest_empty_binary_directory
empties the binary directory
ctest_empty_binary_directory( directory )
Removes a binary directory. This command will perform some checks prior to deleting the directory in an
attempt to avoid malicious or accidental directory deletion.
ctest_memcheck
Perform the CTest MemCheck Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_memcheck([BUILD <build-dir>] [APPEND]
[START <start-number>]
[END <end-number>]
[STRIDE <stride-number>]
[EXCLUDE <exclude-regex>]
[INCLUDE <include-regex>]
[EXCLUDE_LABEL <label-exclude-regex>]
[INCLUDE_LABEL <label-include-regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE <regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_SETUP <regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_CLEANUP <regex>]
[PARALLEL_LEVEL <level>]
[TEST_LOAD <threshold>]
[SCHEDULE_RANDOM <ON|OFF>]
[STOP_TIME <time-of-day>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[DEFECT_COUNT <defect-count-var>]
[QUIET]
)
Run tests with a dynamic analysis tool and store results in MemCheck.xml for submission with the
ctest_submit() command.
Most options are the same as those for the ctest_test() command.
The options unique to this command are:
DEFECT_COUNT <defect-count-var>
Store in the <defect-count-var> the number of defects found.
ctest_read_custom_files
read CTestCustom files.
ctest_read_custom_files( directory ... )
Read all the CTestCustom.ctest or CTestCustom.cmake files from the given directory.
By default, invoking ctest(1) without a script will read custom files from the binary directory.
ctest_run_script
runs a ctest -S script
ctest_run_script([NEW_PROCESS] script_file_name script_file_name1
script_file_name2 ... [RETURN_VALUE var])
Runs a script or scripts much like if it was run from ctest -S. If no argument is provided then the
current script is run using the current settings of the variables. If NEW_PROCESS is specified then each
script will be run in a separate process.If RETURN_VALUE is specified the return value of the last script
run will be put into var.
ctest_sleep
sleeps for some amount of time
ctest_sleep(<seconds>)
Sleep for given number of seconds.
ctest_sleep(<time1> <duration> <time2>)
Sleep for t=(time1 + duration - time2) seconds if t > 0.
ctest_start
Starts the testing for a given model
ctest_start(<model> [<source> [<binary>]] [GROUP <group>] [QUIET])
ctest_start([<model> [<source> [<binary>]]] [GROUP <group>] APPEND [QUIET])
Starts the testing for a given model. The command should be called after the binary directory is
initialized.
The parameters are as follows:
<model>
Set the dashboard model. Must be one of Experimental, Continuous, or Nightly. This parameter is
required unless APPEND is specified.
<source>
Set the source directory. If not specified, the value of CTEST_SOURCE_DIRECTORY is used instead.
<binary>
Set the binary directory. If not specified, the value of CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY is used instead.
GROUP <group>
If GROUP is used, the submissions will go to the specified group on the CDash server. If no GROUP
is specified, the name of the model is used by default. This replaces the deprecated option TRACK.
Despite the name change its behavior is unchanged.
APPEND If APPEND is used, the existing TAG is used rather than creating a new one based on the current
time stamp. If you use APPEND, you can omit the <model> and GROUP <group> parameters, because they
will be read from the generated TAG file. For example:
ctest_start(Experimental GROUP GroupExperimental)
Later, in another ctest -S script:
ctest_start(APPEND)
When the second script runs ctest_start(APPEND), it will read the Experimental model and
GroupExperimental group from the TAG file generated by the first ctest_start() command. Please
note that if you call ctest_start(APPEND) and specify a different model or group than in the first
ctest_start() command, a warning will be issued, and the new model and group will be used.
QUIET If QUIET is used, CTest will suppress any non-error messages that it otherwise would have printed
to the console.
The parameters for ctest_start() can be issued in any order, with the exception that <model>, <source>,
and <binary> have to appear in that order with respect to each other. The following are all valid and
equivalent:
ctest_start(Experimental path/to/source path/to/binary GROUP SomeGroup QUIET APPEND)
ctest_start(GROUP SomeGroup Experimental QUIET path/to/source APPEND path/to/binary)
ctest_start(APPEND QUIET Experimental path/to/source GROUP SomeGroup path/to/binary)
However, for the sake of readability, it is recommended that you order your parameters in the order
listed at the top of this page.
If the CTEST_CHECKOUT_COMMAND variable (or the CTEST_CVS_CHECKOUT variable) is set, its content is
treated as command-line. The command is invoked with the current working directory set to the parent of
the source directory, even if the source directory already exists. This can be used to create the source
tree from a version control repository.
ctest_submit
Perform the CTest Submit Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_submit([PARTS <part>...] [FILES <file>...]
[SUBMIT_URL <url>]
[BUILD_ID <result-var>]
[HTTPHEADER <header>]
[RETRY_COUNT <count>]
[RETRY_DELAY <delay>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>]
[QUIET]
)
Submit results to a dashboard server. By default all available parts are submitted.
The options are:
PARTS <part>...
Specify a subset of parts to submit. Valid part names are:
Start = nothing
Update = ctest_update results, in Update.xml
Configure = ctest_configure results, in Configure.xml
Build = ctest_build results, in Build.xml
Test = ctest_test results, in Test.xml
Coverage = ctest_coverage results, in Coverage.xml
MemCheck = ctest_memcheck results, in DynamicAnalysis.xml
Notes = Files listed by CTEST_NOTES_FILES, in Notes.xml
ExtraFiles = Files listed by CTEST_EXTRA_SUBMIT_FILES
Upload = Files prepared for upload by ctest_upload(), in Upload.xml
Submit = nothing
Done = Build is complete, in Done.xml
FILES <file>...
Specify an explicit list of specific files to be submitted. Each individual file must exist at
the time of the call.
SUBMIT_URL <url>
The http or https URL of the dashboard server to send the submission to. If not given, the
CTEST_SUBMIT_URL variable is used.
BUILD_ID <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable the ID assigned to this build by CDash.
HTTPHEADER <HTTP-header>
Specify HTTP header to be included in the request to CDash during submission. For example, CDash
can be configured to only accept submissions from authenticated clients. In this case, you should
provide a bearer token in your header:
ctest_submit(HTTPHEADER "Authorization: Bearer <auth-token>")
This suboption can be repeated several times for multiple headers.
RETRY_COUNT <count>
Specify how many times to retry a timed-out submission.
RETRY_DELAY <delay>
Specify how long (in seconds) to wait after a timed-out submission before attempting to re-submit.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable 0 for success and non-zero on failure.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Suppress all non-error messages that would have otherwise been printed to the console.
Submit to CDash Upload API
ctest_submit(CDASH_UPLOAD <file> [CDASH_UPLOAD_TYPE <type>]
[SUBMIT_URL <url>]
[HTTPHEADER <header>]
[RETRY_COUNT <count>]
[RETRY_DELAY <delay>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[QUIET])
This second signature is used to upload files to CDash via the CDash file upload API. The API first sends
a request to upload to CDash along with a content hash of the file. If CDash does not already have the
file, then it is uploaded. Along with the file, a CDash type string is specified to tell CDash which
handler to use to process the data.
This signature accepts the SUBMIT_URL, BUILD_ID, HTTPHEADER, RETRY_COUNT, RETRY_DELAY, RETURN_VALUE and
QUIET options as described above.
ctest_test
Perform the CTest Test Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_test([BUILD <build-dir>] [APPEND]
[START <start-number>]
[END <end-number>]
[STRIDE <stride-number>]
[EXCLUDE <exclude-regex>]
[INCLUDE <include-regex>]
[EXCLUDE_LABEL <label-exclude-regex>]
[INCLUDE_LABEL <label-include-regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE <regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_SETUP <regex>]
[EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_CLEANUP <regex>]
[PARALLEL_LEVEL <level>]
[RESOURCE_SPEC_FILE <file>]
[TEST_LOAD <threshold>]
[SCHEDULE_RANDOM <ON|OFF>]
[STOP_TIME <time-of-day>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>]
[QUIET]
)
Run tests in the project build tree and store results in Test.xml for submission with the ctest_submit()
command.
The options are:
BUILD <build-dir>
Specify the top-level build directory. If not given, the CTEST_BINARY_DIRECTORY variable is used.
APPEND Mark Test.xml for append to results previously submitted to a dashboard server since the last
ctest_start() call. Append semantics are defined by the dashboard server in use. This does not
cause results to be appended to a .xml file produced by a previous call to this command.
START <start-number>
Specify the beginning of a range of test numbers.
END <end-number>
Specify the end of a range of test numbers.
STRIDE <stride-number>
Specify the stride by which to step across a range of test numbers.
EXCLUDE <exclude-regex>
Specify a regular expression matching test names to exclude.
INCLUDE <include-regex>
Specify a regular expression matching test names to include. Tests not matching this expression
are excluded.
EXCLUDE_LABEL <label-exclude-regex>
Specify a regular expression matching test labels to exclude.
INCLUDE_LABEL <label-include-regex>
Specify a regular expression matching test labels to include. Tests not matching this expression
are excluded.
EXCLUDE_FIXTURE <regex>
If a test in the set of tests to be executed requires a particular fixture, that fixture’s setup
and cleanup tests would normally be added to the test set automatically. This option prevents
adding setup or cleanup tests for fixtures matching the <regex>. Note that all other fixture
behavior is retained, including test dependencies and skipping tests that have fixture setup tests
that fail.
EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_SETUP <regex>
Same as EXCLUDE_FIXTURE except only matching setup tests are excluded.
EXCLUDE_FIXTURE_CLEANUP <regex>
Same as EXCLUDE_FIXTURE except only matching cleanup tests are excluded.
PARALLEL_LEVEL <level>
Specify a positive number representing the number of tests to be run in parallel.
RESOURCE_SPEC_FILE <file>
Specify a resource specification file. See ctest-resource-allocation for more information.
TEST_LOAD <threshold>
While running tests in parallel, try not to start tests when they may cause the CPU load to pass
above a given threshold. If not specified the CTEST_TEST_LOAD variable will be checked, and then
the --test-load command-line argument to ctest(1). See also the TestLoad setting in the CTest
Test Step.
SCHEDULE_RANDOM <ON|OFF>
Launch tests in a random order. This may be useful for detecting implicit test dependencies.
STOP_TIME <time-of-day>
Specify a time of day at which the tests should all stop running.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable 0 if all tests passed. Store non-zero if anything went wrong.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Suppress any CTest-specific non-error messages that would have otherwise been printed to the
console. Output from the underlying test command is not affected. Summary info detailing the
percentage of passing tests is also unaffected by the QUIET option.
See also the CTEST_CUSTOM_MAXIMUM_PASSED_TEST_OUTPUT_SIZE and
CTEST_CUSTOM_MAXIMUM_FAILED_TEST_OUTPUT_SIZE variables.
ctest_update
Perform the CTest Update Step as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_update([SOURCE <source-dir>]
[RETURN_VALUE <result-var>]
[CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>]
[QUIET])
Update the source tree from version control and record results in Update.xml for submission with the
ctest_submit() command.
The options are:
SOURCE <source-dir>
Specify the source directory. If not given, the CTEST_SOURCE_DIRECTORY variable is used.
RETURN_VALUE <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable the number of files updated or -1 on error.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
QUIET Tell CTest to suppress most non-error messages that it would have otherwise printed to the
console. CTest will still report the new revision of the repository and any conflicting files
that were found.
The update always follows the version control branch currently checked out in the source directory. See
the CTest Update Step documentation for information about variables that change the behavior of
ctest_update().
ctest_upload
Upload files to a dashboard server as a Dashboard Client.
ctest_upload(FILES <file>... [QUIET] [CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>])
The options are:
FILES <file>...
Specify a list of files to be sent along with the build results to the dashboard server.
QUIET Suppress any CTest-specific non-error output that would have been printed to the console
otherwise.
CAPTURE_CMAKE_ERROR <result-var>
Store in the <result-var> variable -1 if there are any errors running the command and prevent
ctest from returning non-zero if an error occurs.
DEPRECATED COMMANDS
These commands are deprecated and are only made available to maintain backward compatibility. The
documentation of each command states the CMake version in which it was deprecated. Do not use these
commands in new code.
build_name
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0036.
Use ${CMAKE_SYSTEM} and ${CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER} instead.
build_name(variable)
Sets the specified variable to a string representing the platform and compiler settings. These values
are now available through the CMAKE_SYSTEM and CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER variables.
exec_program
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the execute_process() command instead.
Run an executable program during the processing of the CMakeList.txt file.
exec_program(Executable [directory in which to run]
[ARGS <arguments to executable>]
[OUTPUT_VARIABLE <var>]
[RETURN_VALUE <var>])
The executable is run in the optionally specified directory. The executable can include arguments if it
is double quoted, but it is better to use the optional ARGS argument to specify arguments to the program.
This is because cmake will then be able to escape spaces in the executable path. An optional argument
OUTPUT_VARIABLE specifies a variable in which to store the output. To capture the return value of the
execution, provide a RETURN_VALUE. If OUTPUT_VARIABLE is specified, then no output will go to the
stdout/stderr of the console running cmake.
export_library_dependencies
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0033.
Use install(EXPORT) or export() command.
This command generates an old-style library dependencies file. Projects requiring CMake 2.6 or later
should not use the command. Use instead the install(EXPORT) command to help export targets from an
installation tree and the export() command to export targets from a build tree.
The old-style library dependencies file does not take into account per-configuration names of libraries
or the LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES target property.
export_library_dependencies(<file> [APPEND])
Create a file named <file> that can be included into a CMake listfile with the INCLUDE command. The file
will contain a number of SET commands that will set all the variables needed for library dependency
information. This should be the last command in the top level CMakeLists.txt file of the project. If
the APPEND option is specified, the SET commands will be appended to the given file instead of replacing
it.
install_files
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the install(FILES) command instead.
This command has been superceded by the install() command. It is provided for compatibility with older
CMake code. The FILES form is directly replaced by the FILES form of the install() command. The regexp
form can be expressed more clearly using the GLOB form of the file() command.
install_files(<dir> extension file file ...)
Create rules to install the listed files with the given extension into the given directory. Only files
existing in the current source tree or its corresponding location in the binary tree may be listed. If a
file specified already has an extension, that extension will be removed first. This is useful for
providing lists of source files such as foo.cxx when you want the corresponding foo.h to be installed. A
typical extension is .h.
install_files(<dir> regexp)
Any files in the current source directory that match the regular expression will be installed.
install_files(<dir> FILES file file ...)
Any files listed after the FILES keyword will be installed explicitly from the names given. Full paths
are allowed in this form.
The directory <dir> is relative to the installation prefix, which is stored in the variable
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.
install_programs
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the install(PROGRAMS) command instead.
This command has been superceded by the install() command. It is provided for compatibility with older
CMake code. The FILES form is directly replaced by the PROGRAMS form of the install() command. The
regexp form can be expressed more clearly using the GLOB form of the file() command.
install_programs(<dir> file1 file2 [file3 ...])
install_programs(<dir> FILES file1 [file2 ...])
Create rules to install the listed programs into the given directory. Use the FILES argument to
guarantee that the file list version of the command will be used even when there is only one argument.
install_programs(<dir> regexp)
In the second form any program in the current source directory that matches the regular expression will
be installed.
This command is intended to install programs that are not built by cmake, such as shell scripts. See the
TARGETS form of the install() command to create installation rules for targets built by cmake.
The directory <dir> is relative to the installation prefix, which is stored in the variable
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.
install_targets
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the install(TARGETS) command instead.
This command has been superceded by the install() command. It is provided for compatibility with older
CMake code.
install_targets(<dir> [RUNTIME_DIRECTORY dir] target target)
Create rules to install the listed targets into the given directory. The directory <dir> is relative to
the installation prefix, which is stored in the variable CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. If RUNTIME_DIRECTORY is
specified, then on systems with special runtime files (Windows DLL), the files will be copied to that
directory.
load_command
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0031.
Load a command into a running CMake.
load_command(COMMAND_NAME <loc1> [loc2 ...])
The given locations are searched for a library whose name is cmCOMMAND_NAME. If found, it is loaded as a
module and the command is added to the set of available CMake commands. Usually, try_compile() is used
before this command to compile the module. If the command is successfully loaded a variable named
CMAKE_LOADED_COMMAND_<COMMAND_NAME>
will be set to the full path of the module that was loaded. Otherwise the variable will not be set.
make_directory
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the file(MAKE_DIRECTORY) command instead.
make_directory(directory)
Creates the specified directory. Full paths should be given. Any parent directories that do not exist
will also be created. Use with care.
output_required_files
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0032.
Approximate C preprocessor dependency scanning.
This command exists only because ancient CMake versions provided it. CMake handles preprocessor
dependency scanning automatically using a more advanced scanner.
output_required_files(srcfile outputfile)
Outputs a list of all the source files that are required by the specified srcfile. This list is written
into outputfile. This is similar to writing out the dependencies for srcfile except that it jumps from
.h files into .cxx, .c and .cpp files if possible.
qt_wrap_cpp
Deprecated since version 3.14: This command was originally added to support Qt 3 before the
add_custom_command() command was sufficiently mature. The FindQt4 module provides the qt4_wrap_cpp()
macro, which should be used instead for Qt 4 projects. For projects using Qt 5 or later, use the
equivalent macro provided by Qt itself (e.g. Qt 5 provides qt5_wrap_cpp()).
Manually create Qt Wrappers.
qt_wrap_cpp(resultingLibraryName DestName SourceLists ...)
Produces moc files for all the .h files listed in the SourceLists. The moc files will be added to the
library using the DestName source list.
Consider updating the project to use the AUTOMOC target property instead for a more automated way of
invoking the moc tool.
qt_wrap_ui
Deprecated since version 3.14: This command was originally added to support Qt 3 before the
add_custom_command() command was sufficiently mature. The FindQt4 module provides the qt4_wrap_ui()
macro, which should be used instead for Qt 4 projects. For projects using Qt 5 or later, use the
equivalent macro provided by Qt itself (e.g. Qt 5 provides qt5_wrap_ui()).
Manually create Qt user interfaces Wrappers.
qt_wrap_ui(resultingLibraryName HeadersDestName
SourcesDestName SourceLists ...)
Produces .h and .cxx files for all the .ui files listed in the SourceLists. The .h files will be added
to the library using the HeadersDestNamesource list. The .cxx files will be added to the library using
the SourcesDestNamesource list.
Consider updating the project to use the AUTOUIC target property instead for a more automated way of
invoking the uic tool.
remove
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the list(REMOVE_ITEM) command instead.
remove(VAR VALUE VALUE ...)
Removes VALUE from the variable VAR. This is typically used to remove entries from a vector (e.g.
semicolon separated list). VALUE is expanded.
subdir_depends
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0029.
Does nothing.
subdir_depends(subdir dep1 dep2 ...)
Does not do anything. This command used to help projects order parallel builds correctly. This
functionality is now automatic.
subdirs
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the add_subdirectory() command instead.
Add a list of subdirectories to the build.
subdirs(dir1 dir2 ...[EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL exclude_dir1 exclude_dir2 ...]
[PREORDER] )
Add a list of subdirectories to the build. The add_subdirectory() command should be used instead of
subdirs although subdirs will still work. This will cause any CMakeLists.txt files in the sub
directories to be processed by CMake. Any directories after the PREORDER flag are traversed first by
makefile builds, the PREORDER flag has no effect on IDE projects. Any directories after the
EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL marker will not be included in the top level makefile or project file. This is useful
for having CMake create makefiles or projects for a set of examples in a project. You would want CMake
to generate makefiles or project files for all the examples at the same time, but you would not want them
to show up in the top level project or be built each time make is run from the top.
use_mangled_mesa
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0030.
Copy mesa headers for use in combination with system GL.
use_mangled_mesa(PATH_TO_MESA OUTPUT_DIRECTORY)
The path to mesa includes, should contain gl_mangle.h. The mesa headers are copied to the specified
output directory. This allows mangled mesa headers to override other GL headers by being added to the
include directory path earlier.
utility_source
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0034.
Specify the source tree of a third-party utility.
utility_source(cache_entry executable_name
path_to_source [file1 file2 ...])
When a third-party utility’s source is included in the distribution, this command specifies its location
and name. The cache entry will not be set unless the path_to_source and all listed files exist. It is
assumed that the source tree of the utility will have been built before it is needed.
When cross compiling CMake will print a warning if a utility_source() command is executed, because in
many cases it is used to build an executable which is executed later on. This doesn’t work when cross
compiling, since the executable can run only on their target platform. So in this case the cache entry
has to be adjusted manually so it points to an executable which is runnable on the build host.
variable_requires
Disallowed since version 3.0. See CMake Policy CMP0035.
Use the if() command instead.
Assert satisfaction of an option’s required variables.
variable_requires(TEST_VARIABLE RESULT_VARIABLE
REQUIRED_VARIABLE1
REQUIRED_VARIABLE2 ...)
The first argument (TEST_VARIABLE) is the name of the variable to be tested, if that variable is false
nothing else is done. If TEST_VARIABLE is true, then the next argument (RESULT_VARIABLE) is a variable
that is set to true if all the required variables are set. The rest of the arguments are variables that
must be true or not set to NOTFOUND to avoid an error. If any are not true, an error is reported.
write_file
Deprecated since version 3.0: Use the file(WRITE) command instead.
write_file(filename "message to write"... [APPEND])
The first argument is the file name, the rest of the arguments are messages to write. If the argument
APPEND is specified, then the message will be appended.
NOTE 1: file(WRITE) and file(APPEND) do exactly the same as this one but add some more functionality.
NOTE 2: When using write_file the produced file cannot be used as an input to CMake (CONFIGURE_FILE,
source file …) because it will lead to an infinite loop. Use configure_file() if you want to generate
input files to CMake.
COPYRIGHT
2000-2022 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors
3.16.3 September 27, 2022 CMAKE-COMMANDS(7)