cmake cannot find libsndfile - c++

Cmake seems not to find the lib libsndfile. However, it installed on my machine.
find_library(sndfile REQUIRED)
And installed :
yum list installed | grep libsnd
libsndfile.x86_64 1.0.25-11.el7 #base
libsndfile-devel.x86_64 1.0.25-11.el7 #base
The error :
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:65 (find_library):
Could not find sndfile using the following names:
CMakeLists.txt :
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.19)
project(untitled1)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11)
find_library(sndfile REQUIRED)
add_executable(untitled1 main.cpp)
Main.cpp
#include <iostream>
int main() {
std::cout << "Hello, World!" << std::endl;
return 0;
}

It doesn't mean much if it is installed on your machine or not. CMake won't search all your computer for the library. The best thing you can do is to add the location of the installed library to your PATH environment variable.
Here's what CMake documentation says about find_library() HINTS and PATHS arguments:
HINTS, PATHS
Specify directories to search in addition to the default
locations. The ENV var sub-option reads paths from a system
environment variable.
CMake also provides another solution: set CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
You can find more details about it here.

Related

CMake not finding GL/glew.h

I'm using CLion under pop_OS! 20.04 and am currently trying to get CMake to work with GLEW because I want to follow these tutorials to get started with OpenGL. I'm relatively new to C/C++ and completely new to CMake.
I installed the libgl1-mesa-dev,libglew-dev,libglfw3,libglfw3-dev packages with apt-get install and the glew.h is located alongside the other GL header files in /usr/include/GL.
When trying to compile a simple program:
#include <GL/glew.h>
int main() {
return 0;
}
cmake can't find the headerfile:
test/main.cpp:1:10: fatal error: GL/glew.h: No such file or directory
1 | #include <GL/glew.h>
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
Do I have to manually add these header files in CMakeLists.txt for cmake to find them? I tried like a dozen different suggestions but I didn't get it to work. For example, I tried
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.17)
project(test)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
find_package(GLEW REQUIRED)
include_directories(${GLEW_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_libraries(${GLEW_LIBRARIES})
target_link_libraries(test GLEW::GLEW)
but this results in
CMake Error at /app/extra/clion/bin/cmake/linux/share/cmake-3.17/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:164 (message):
Could NOT find GLEW (missing: GLEW_INCLUDE_DIRS GLEW_LIBRARIES)
Is this somehow a problem with CLion and I need to include libraries into my project in a different manner? Or am I using cmake in a wrong way?
Your last try was nearly right.
Forget about include_directories and link_libraries commands. All it needs when doing modern CMake is an add_executable(test main.cpp) followed by a target_link_libraries(test PRIVATE GLEW::glew) command. The target GLEW::glew (case matters here) bundles all compile definitions, include directories, libraries, and further settings that are needed to compile and link your example.
Your CMakeLists.txt would now look like this:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.17)
project(test)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
find_package(GLEW REQUIRED)
add_executable(myTest main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(myTest PRIVATE GLEW::glew)
Edit: Just noticed, that GLEW::GLEW can also be used.
The answer by #vre is OK. I only add how to find it yourself.
First, run
cmake --help-module-list
and look for GLEW. Under Linux, you can simplify this step to
cmake --help-module-list | grep -i Glew
where -i stands for "case insesitive match", as we usually don't remember if it's GLEW or perhaps Glew. Once you know the module name, you can ask for the specific help related to just this module:
cmake --help-module FindGLEW
The answer is there. Read and enjoy!
PS. There's no need to memorize this answer. All can be reduced to cmake --help.

How to use Caffe library in C++ project with CMakeLists.txt

I'm trying to use Caffe in my C++ project which I compile with CMakeLists.txt, but it doesn't want to work. My only line in the code is
#include <caffe/caffe.hpp>
I compiled Caffe myself, it is installed in the directory "/home/tamas/caffe". My CMakeLists.txt looks like this so far:
cmake_minimum_required (VERSION 3.5)
include(FindPkgConfig)
project (main)
set (CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11)
set (CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED TRUE)
set (CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -Wall -Werror -std=c++11 -pthread")
set (source_dir "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/")
set (OpenCV_DIR "/home/tamas/opencv/include/opencv2")
set (Caffe_DIR "/home/tamas/caffe")
file (GLOB source_files "${source_dir}/ssd_video.cpp")
find_package(OpenCV 4.4.0 REQUIRED)
include_directories(${OpenCV_INCLUDE_DIRS})
find_package(Caffe REQUIRED)
include_directories(${Caffe_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable (main ${source_files})
target_link_libraries(main ${OpenCV_LIBS})
target_link_libraries(main ${Caffe_LIBRARIES})
The error is the following:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:24 (find_package):
By not providing "FindCaffe.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project has
asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by "Caffe", but
CMake did not find one.
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "Caffe" with any of
the following names:
CaffeConfig.cmake
caffe-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "Caffe" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"Caffe_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If "Caffe"
provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has been
installed.
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
The problem is that I have searched and I don't have a FindCaffe.cmake file on my computer. I found an example for CaffeConfig.cmake, but I tried it and it doesn't work either.
Is there a way I can link Caffe with my C++ project? Thanks!
To fix this issue you may do the following:
Download this FindCAFFE.cmake file
Create cmake dir in your repo root directory and put the downloaded file there.
Modify your CMake file:
add set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH} "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake")
change set (Caffe_DIR "/home/tamas/caffe") to set (CAFFE_ROOT_DIR "/home/tamas/caffe")
change find_package(Caffe REQUIRED) to find_package(CAFFE REQUIRED)
use CAFFE_INCLUDE_DIRS and CAFFE_LIBRARIES for include directories and link libraries respectively
Clean up your build dir and run cmake command again
<library>_DIR should not be set manually in CMake code usually. There are better alternatives that should be used as setting these variable won't necessarily do what you want. It won't change where find_package finds its libraries.
The CaffeConfig.cmake file is generated when building Caffe. You should never download another one, these files are compatible only with a specific build configuration.
The Caffe library supports to be used with CMake, so FindCaffe.cmake is unnecessary.
For find_package to work, either set the <package>_ROOT variable (require CMake 3.12 minimum) or you must append the install path in CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH. Here's a CMake example that uses the prefix path:
# If you only built the library
list (APPEND CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH "/home/tamas/caffe/build-dir")
# If you installed the library there
list (APPEND CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH "/home/tamas/caffe/")
find_package(Caffe REQUIRED)
Note that the Caffe_LIBRARIES and Caffe_INCLUDE_DIRS won't be set. This is old CMake style and the Caffe library uses the new style. This is what you should do:
target_link_libraries(main PUBLIC caffe caffeproto)
This line add both include directory and adds linking to the libraries too.

How do I include the Eigen library in a CMakelist.txt on windows

I am trying to include the Eigen library to my CMakelist.txt. I have followed the CMake instructions on the Eigen Docs but I am using Jetbrain's Clion and not CMake directly. So I do not know how to use the Cmake commands provided. I have researched around but I don't have have a very good understanding of CMake to write Cmakelists, so I haven't been able to get anything to work yet.
this is what I have been using just to test the serup of the library:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.17)
project(Eigen_Test)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 20)
find_package (Eigen3 3.3 REQUIRED NO_MODULE)
add_executable (example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries (example eigen)
add_executable(Eigen_Test main.cpp)
this is the error I have been receiving:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:5 (find_package):
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "Eigen3" (requested
version 3.3) with any of the following names:
Eigen3Config.cmake
eigen3-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "Eigen3" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"Eigen3_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If "Eigen3"
provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has been installed.
I Have researched many ways to include the library but most methods use command lines which I am unfamiliar with. Also I do not have an Eigen3Config.cmake the only file I have Eigen3Config.cmake.in. I assume there is some install trick that I must not be aware of. If anyone has a way to include clion strictly using a CMakelist.txt, I would be greatly appreciative.
Here a working example with CMake on Windows using the MinGW environment with mingw32-make.exe and g++.exe compiler.
CMakeLists.txt :
# The following lines depends on your project :
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.19)
project(PROJECT_NAME)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17)
# You have to set these variables as Windows environment variables:
# EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR <- %EIGEN3_ROOT%
# EIGEN3_DIR <- %EIGEN3_ROOT%\cmake
#
# EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR: variable needed for file %EIGEN3_ROOT%/cmake/FindEigen3.cmake
#
# CMAKE_MODULE_PATH: Search path for the module Eigen3 to be loaded by find_package
#
SET( EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR "$ENV{EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}" )
SET( CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "$ENV{EIGEN3_DIR}" )
find_package( Eigen3 3.3 REQUIRED )
# include_directories is needed for the compiler to know where looking for Eigen3 header files to be included
include_directories( ${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR} )
add_executable(PROJECT_NAME FILES...)
You can then call the Eigen3 libraries, such as:
#include <Eigen/Core>
Eigen is a header only library, so you don't have to add it to target_link_library, and you don't need a CMake Macro to detect it.
Instead just add the header file into your include path and you should be set.

what is the proper way of configuring visual studio code to use sdl2 over mingw32 and cmake [duplicate]

I'm trying to use CLion to create a SDL2 project.
The problem is that the SDL headers can't be found when using #include's.
My CMakeLists.txt file:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.4)
project(ChickenShooter)
set(SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR C:/SDL/SDL2-2.0.3/include)
set(SDL2_LIBRARY C:/SDL/SDL2-2.0.3/lib/x64)
include_directories(${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR})
set(SOURCE_FILES main.cpp)
add_executable(ChickenShooter ${SOURCE_FILES})
target_link_libraries(ChickenShooter ${SDL2_LIBRARY})
My test main.cpp:
#include <iostream>
#include "SDL.h" /* This one can't be found */
int main(){
if (SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO) != 0){
std::cout << "SDL_Init Error: " << SDL_GetError() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
SDL_Quit();
return 0;
}
Thank you for any help you could give me.
Edit:
I'm using Windows and CLion is configured to use cygwin64.
This blog post shows how you can do it: Using SDL2 with CMake
On Linux you can use a recent CMake (e.g. version 3.7) and using SDL2 works out of the box.
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
project(SDL2Test)
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
include_directories(SDL2Test ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(SDL2Test Main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(SDL2Test ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
Under Windows you can download the SDL2 development package, extract it somewhere and then create a sdl-config.cmake file in the extracted location with the following content:
set(SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/include")
# Support both 32 and 64 bit builds
if (${CMAKE_SIZEOF_VOID_P} MATCHES 8)
set(SDL2_LIBRARIES "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/lib/x64/SDL2.lib;${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/lib/x64/SDL2main.lib")
else ()
set(SDL2_LIBRARIES "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/lib/x86/SDL2.lib;${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/lib/x86/SDL2main.lib")
endif ()
string(STRIP "${SDL2_LIBRARIES}" SDL2_LIBRARIES)
When you now configure inside the CMake-GUI application there will be a SDL2_DIR variable. You have to point it to the SDL2 directory where you extracted the dev package and reconfigure then everything should work.
You can then include SDL2 headers by just writing #include "SDL.h".
Don't set the path to SDL2 by hand. Use the proper find command which uses FindSDL. Should look like:
find_file(SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR NAME SDL.h HINTS SDL2)
find_library(SDL2_LIBRARY NAME SDL2)
add_executable(ChickenShooter main.cpp)
target_include_directories(ChickenShooter ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR})
target_link_libraries(ChickenShooter ${SDL2_LIBRARY})
If SDL2 is not found, you have to add the path to SDL2 to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH, that's the place where CMake looks for installed software.
If you can use Pkg-config, its use might be easier, see How to use SDL2 and SDL_image with cmake
If you feel more comfortable to use a FindSDL2.cmake file similar to FindSDL.cmake provided by CMake, see https://brendanwhitfield.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/using-cmake-with-sdl2/
You can also pull in the SDL source repository as a submodule and build/link it statically along with your main program via add_subdirectory() and target_link_libraries():
cmake_minimum_required( VERSION 3.18.0 )
project( sdl2-demo )
set( SDL_STATIC ON CACHE BOOL "" FORCE )
set( SDL_SHARED OFF CACHE BOOL "" FORCE )
# 'external/sdl' should point at a SDL
# repo clone or extracted release tarball
add_subdirectory( external/sdl )
add_executable(
${CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME}
"src/main.cpp"
)
target_link_libraries( ${CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME} SDL2main SDL2-static )
(At least as of the release-2.0.9 tag, possibly earlier.)
I recently discovered the latest version of SDL2 (version 2.0.12) now comes with all the required CMake config/install scripts, so there's no need to use FindSDL anymore.
I downloaded the SDL source from https://www.libsdl.org/download-2.0.php then from the root folder ran...
cmake -S . -B build/debug -G Ninja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=./install -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
cmake --build build/debug --target install
This will build and install the debug version of the library, you can then also run...
cmake -S . -B build/release -G Ninja -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=./install -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build build/release --target install
Which will build and install the release version of the library (and because the SDL CMake script uses DEBUG_POSTFIX the release version of the library won't overwrite the debug one as the debug versions all have 'd' appended to their name).
In your CMakeLists.txt file you can then simply do this:
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} ...)
target_link_libraries(
${PROJECT_NAME} PRIVATE
SDL2::SDL2
SDL2::SDL2main
You'll need to tell your application where to find the SDL install folder if you used a custom location as I've done in the example. To do this from the root folder of your app run:
cmake -S . -B build/debug -G Ninja -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=</absolute/path/to/install/dir>
cmake --build build/debug
Note: You can use $(pwd) (*nix/macOS) or %cd% (Windows) to create a hybrid relative path which can be very useful.
You can omit both DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX and DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH if you want to install SDL to the default system location.
In the examples I've opted to use the Ninja generator as it is consistent across macOS/Windows - it can be used with MSVC/Visual Studio, just make sure you run this (path may differ slightly depending on year/version) to add Ninja to your path.
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat
Update:
One other thing I remembered which is useful on Windows is the ability to copy the SDL .dll file into the application binary directory, this can be achieved like so:
if (WIN32)
# copy the .dll file to the same folder as the executable
add_custom_command(
TARGET ${PROJECT_NAME} POST_BUILD
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy_if_different
$<TARGET_FILE:SDL2::SDL2>
$<TARGET_FILE_DIR:${PROJECT_NAME}>
VERBATIM)
endif()
Using the SDL2 CMake module that I developed, you can integrate the SDL2 library easily in a modern and portable approach.
You should just copy the module in cmake/sdl2 (Or just clone the modules repo) in your project:
git clone https://github.com/aminosbh/sdl2-cmake-modules cmake/sdl2
Then add the following lines in your CMakeLists.txt:
list(APPEND CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake/sdl2)
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME} SDL2::Main)
Note: If CMake didn't find the SDL2 library (in Windows), we can specify the CMake option SDL2_PATH as follows:
cmake .. -DSDL2_PATH="/path/to/sdl2"
For more details, please read the README.md file.
The SDL2 CMake modules support other related libraries : SDL2_image, SDL2_ttf, SDL2_mixer, SDL2_net and SDL2_gfx.
You can find a list of examples/samples and projects that uses these modules here : https://github.com/aminosbh/sdl-samples-and-projects
With the compiled version of SDL2-2.0.9 with MinGW-w64 in Windows, the following configuration works for me:
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
add_executable(sdl-test ${SOURCES})
target_link_libraries(sdl-test
mingw32
SDL2::SDL2main
SDL2::SDL2
)
A longer explanation
By reading SDL2Targets.cmake file, I've learned that SDL2 is providing several targets:
SDL2::SDL2main (lib/libSDL2main.a)
SDL2::SDL2 (lib/libSDL2.dll.a)
SDL2::SDL2-static (lib/libSDL2-static.a)
Each of them has INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES defined, which means we don't need to manually specify include_directories for SDL2.
But by only adding SDL2::SDL2main and SDL2::SDL2 as target_link_libraries is not enough. The g++ compiler might be complaining about "undefined reference to `WinMain'".
By inspecting the compiler options, I found that the SDL2 libraries are added before -lmingw32 option. In order to make the -lmingw32 option comes before SDL2 libraries, we have to also specify mingw32 as the first target_link_libraries. Which will make this configuration working.
The command that I have used for building it is:
$ mkdir build && cd build && cmake .. -G"MinGW Makefiles" && cmake --build .
The only small problem here is in the finally generated compiler options, the -lmingw32 option is duplicated. But since it doesn't affect the linking process, I've ignored it for now.
On Linux, in Clion, this works:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.20)
project(first_game)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
include_directories(${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME} ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
You don't seems to have a CMake error whike generating your make file. But I think your problem is, the SDL Header are located in a subfolder named "SDL2".
Change your CMakeLists.txt to include
C:/SDL/SDL2-2.0.3/include/SDL2
Instead of
C:/SDL/SDL2-2.0.3/include
I had the same problem and none of the other solutions worked.
But I finally got it working by following this solution : How to properly link libraries with cmake?
In a nutshell, the problem was that the SDL2 library was not linked properly in my CMakeLists.txt. And by writing this into the file, it worked (more explainations in the other thread) :
project (MyProgramExecBlaBla) #not sure whether this should be the same name of the executable, but I always see that "convention"
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
ADD_LIBRARY(LibsModule
file1.cpp
file2.cpp
)
target_link_libraries(LibsModule -lpthread)
target_link_libraries(LibsModule liblapack.a)
target_link_libraries(LibsModule -L/home/user/libs/somelibpath/)
ADD_EXECUTABLE(MyProgramExecBlaBla main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(MyProgramExecBlaBla LibsModule)
Highlighting the steps of how I was able to eventually accomplish this using the FindSDL2.cmake module:
Download SDL2-devel-2.0.9-VC.zip (or whatever version is out after this answer is posted) under the Development Libraries section of the downloads page.
Extract the zip folder and you should see a folder similar to "SDL2-2.0.9". Paste this folder in your C:\Program Files(x86)\ directory.
Copy the FindSDL2.cmake module and place it in a new "cmake" directory within your project. I found a FindSDL2.cmake file in the answer referenced in the Accepted Answer: https://brendanwhitfield.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/using-cmake-with-sdl2/
Find the SET(SDL2_SEARCH_PATHS line in the FindSDL2.cmake and add your copied development directory for SDL2 as a new line: "/Program Files (x86)/SDL2-2.0.9" # Windows
Within my CMakeLists.txt, add this line: set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake)
After this, running CMake worked for me. I'm including the rest of my CMakeLists just in case it further clarifies anything I may have left out:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.4)
project(Test_Project)
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -std=c++11")
# includes cmake/FindSDL2.cmake
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake)
set(SOURCE_FILES src/main.cpp src/test.cpp)
add_executable(test ${SOURCE_FILES})
# The two lines below have been removed to run on my Windows machine
#INCLUDE(FindPkgConfig)
#PKG_SEARCH_MODULE(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
find_package(SDL2 REQUIRED)
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES(${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIR})
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(chip8 ${SDL2_LIBRARY})
Hope this helps somebody in the near future.
by the time of my answer, SDL2 is provided with sdl2-config executable (as I understand, developers call him "experimental").
After "make install" of SDL2 you can try calling it from terminal with
sdl2-config --cflags --libs to see what it outputs.
And then you can add call to it in your makefile:
set(PROJECT_NAME SomeProject)
project(${PROJECT_NAME})
execute_process(COMMAND /usr/local/bin/sdl2-config --libs RESULT_VARIABLE CMD_RES OUTPUT_VARIABLE SDL2_CFLAGS_LIBS ERROR_VARIABLE ERR_VAR OUTPUT_STRIP_TRAILING_WHITESPACE)
message("SDL2_CFLAGS_LIBS=${SDL2_CFLAGS_LIBS}; CMD_RES=${CMD_RES}; ERR_VAR=${ERR_VAR}")
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -std=c++11 ${SDL2_CFLAGS_LIBS}")
set(SOURCE_FILES main.cpp)
add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} ${SOURCE_FILES})
Here I have a problem - if I only put an executable name without path like
execute_process(COMMAND sdl2-config --libs <...>
I get error "No such file", i.e. cmake does not search in current path and I don't know how to write it properly by now.
One more notice: in my makefile I do not user --cflags option, because cmake finds includes correctly and I do not need to specify them explicitly.
For your information, I was able to successfully cmake and compile SDL2_ttf while linking to SDL2 source code.
At first I was getting errors due to cmake not being able to locate SDL2, even though it was specified in cmake using the SLD2_DIR variable in cmake.
It seems that for some reason cmaking SDL2 fails to create the SDL2Targets.cmake file which is searched for by SDL2_ttf
If this is the case for you, get the SDL2Targets.cmake file from https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/57972 and modify the file like so:
You can remove the following lines:
get_filename_component(_IMPORT_PREFIX "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_FILE}" PATH)
get_filename_component(_IMPORT_PREFIX "${_IMPORT_PREFIX}" PATH)
get_filename_component(_IMPORT_PREFIX "${_IMPORT_PREFIX}" PATH)
get_filename_component(_IMPORT_PREFIX "${_IMPORT_PREFIX}" PATH)
if(_IMPORT_PREFIX STREQUAL "/")
set(_IMPORT_PREFIX "")
endif()
and add this one:
set(_IMPORT_PREFIX "C:/SDL2-2.0.12")
Obviously change the filepath to the place you unpacked the SDL2 source code
I'm not sure if this is exactly your issue, but there it is.

Undefined reference with boost asio ssl [duplicate]

I have a question for people who work with CMakeList.txt in C++. I want to use Podofo project (a project to parse & create pdf).
So my main function is simple as:
#include <iostream>
#include <podofo/podofo.h>
int main() {
PoDoFo::PdfMemDocument pdf;
pdf.Load("/Users/user/path/to.pdf");
int nbOfPage = pdf.GetPageCount();
std::cout << "Our pdf have " << nbOfPage << " pages." << std::endl;
return 0;
}
My CMakeList.txt is:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.7)
project(untitled)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
set(SOURCE_FILES main.cpp)
add_executable(untitled ${SOURCE_FILES})
But I am stuck with this error:
/usr/local/include/podofo/base/PdfEncrypt.h:44:10: fatal error: 'openssl/opensslconf.h' file not found
#include <openssl/opensslconf.h
I tried to include with find_package, find_library .. setting some variables but I do not find the way.
My env is:
macOS
Clion
Podofo installed via home-brew in /usr/local/podofo
OpenSSL installed via home-brew in /usr/local/opt/openssl
Thanks by advance community !!
find_package is the correct approach; you find details about it here.
In your case, you should add these lines:
find_package(OpenSSL REQUIRED)
target_link_libraries(untitled OpenSSL::SSL)
If CMake doesn't find OpenSSL directly, you should set the CMake variable OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR.