Looking around on the net I have seen a lot of code like this:
include(FindPkgConfig)
pkg_search_module(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
target_include_directories(app SYSTEM PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_link_libraries(app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
However that seems to be the wrong way about doing it, as it only uses the include directories and libraries, but ignored defines, library paths and other flags that might be returned by pkg-config.
What would be the correct way to do this and ensure that all compile and link flags returned by pkg-config are used by the compiled app? And is there a single command to accomplish this, i.e. something like target_use(app SDL2)?
ref:
include()
FindPkgConfig
First of, the call:
include(FindPkgConfig)
should be replaced with:
find_package(PkgConfig)
The find_package() call is more flexible and allows options such as REQUIRED, that do things automatically that one would have to do manually with include().
Secondly, manually calling pkg-config should be avoid when possible. CMake comes with a rich set of package definitions, found in Linux under /usr/share/cmake-3.0/Modules/Find*cmake. These provide more options and choice for the user than a raw call to pkg_search_module().
As for the mentioned hypothetical target_use() command, CMake already has that built-in in a way with PUBLIC|PRIVATE|INTERFACE. A call like target_include_directories(mytarget PUBLIC ...) will cause the include directories to be automatically used in every target that uses mytarget, e.g. target_link_libraries(myapp mytarget). However this mechanism seems to be only for libraries created within the CMakeLists.txt file and does not work for libraries acquired with pkg_search_module(). The call add_library(bar SHARED IMPORTED) might be used for that, but I haven't yet looked into that.
As for the main question, this here works in most cases:
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
...
target_link_libraries(testapp ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
The SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER contains defines and other flags necessary for a successful compile. The flags SDL2_LIBRARY_DIRS and SDL2_LDFLAGS_OTHER are however still ignored, no idea how often that would become a problem.
More documentation here http://www.cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPkgConfig.html
If you're using cmake and pkg-config in a pretty normal way, this solution works.
If, however, you have a library that exists in some development directory (such as /home/me/hack/lib), then using other methods seen here fail to configure the linker paths. Libraries that are not found under the typical install locations would result in linker errors, like /usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lmy-hacking-library-1.0. This solution fixes the linker error for that case.
Another issue could be that the pkg-config files are not installed in the normal place, and the pkg-config paths for the project need to be added using the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable while cmake is running (see other Stack Overflow questions regarding this). This solution also works well when you use the correct pkg-config path.
Using IMPORTED_TARGET is key to solving the issues above. This solution is an improvement on this earlier answer and boils down to this final version of a working CMakeLists.txt:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14)
project(ya-project C)
# the `pkg_check_modules` function is created with this call
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
# these calls create special `PkgConfig::<MODULE>` variables
pkg_check_modules(MY_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET any-package)
pkg_check_modules(YOUR_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET ya-package)
add_executable(program-name file.c ya.c)
target_link_libraries(program-name PUBLIC
PkgConfig::MY_PKG
PkgConfig::YOUR_PKG)
Note that target_link_libraries does more than change the linker commands. It also propagates other PUBLIC properties of specified targets like compiler flags, compiler defines, include paths, etc., so, use the PUBLIC keyword with caution.
It's rare that one would only need to link with SDL2. The currently popular answer uses pkg_search_module() which checks for given modules and uses the first working one.
It is more likely that you want to link with SDL2 and SDL2_Mixer and SDL2_TTF, etc... pkg_check_modules() checks for all the given modules.
# sdl2 linking variables
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2 SDL2_ttf SDL2_mixer SDL2_image)
# your app
file(GLOB SRC "my_app/*.c")
add_executable(my_app ${SRC})
target_link_libraries(my_app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
Disclaimer: I would have simply commented on Grumbel's self answer if I had enough street creds with stackoverflow.
Most of the available answers fail to configure the headers for the pkg-config library. After meditating on the Documentation for FindPkgConfig I came up with a solution that provides those also:
include(FindPkgConfig)
if(NOT PKG_CONFIG_FOUND)
message(FATAL_ERROR "pkg-config not found!" )
endif()
pkg_check_modules(<some-lib> REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET <some-lib>)
target_link_libraries(<my-target> PkgConfig::<some-lib>)
(Substitute your target in place of <my-target> and whatever library in place of <some-lib>, accordingly.)
The IMPORTED_TARGET option seems to be key and makes everything then available under the PkgConfig:: namespace. This was all that was required and also all that should be required.
There is no such command as target_use. But I know several projects that have written such a command for their internal use. But every project want to pass additional flags or defines, thus it does not make sense to have it in general CMake. Another reason not to have it are C++ templated libraries like Eigen, there is no library but you only have a bunch of include files.
The described way is often correct. It might differ for some libraries, then you'll have to add _LDFLAGS or _CFLAGS. One more reason for not having target_use. If it does not work for you, ask a new question specific about SDL2 or whatever library you want use.
If you are looking to add definitions from the library as well, the add_definitions instruction is there for that. Documentation can be found here, along with more ways to add compiler flags.
The following code snippet uses this instruction to add GTKGL to the project:
pkg_check_modules(GTKGL REQUIRED gtkglext-1.0)
include_directories(${GTKGL_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_directories(${GTKGL_LIBRARY_DIRS})
add_definitions(${GTKGL_CFLAGS_OTHER})
set(LIBS ${LIBS} ${GTKGL_LIBRARIES})
target_link_libraries([insert name of program] ${LIBS})
Related
Looking around on the net I have seen a lot of code like this:
include(FindPkgConfig)
pkg_search_module(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
target_include_directories(app SYSTEM PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_link_libraries(app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
However that seems to be the wrong way about doing it, as it only uses the include directories and libraries, but ignored defines, library paths and other flags that might be returned by pkg-config.
What would be the correct way to do this and ensure that all compile and link flags returned by pkg-config are used by the compiled app? And is there a single command to accomplish this, i.e. something like target_use(app SDL2)?
ref:
include()
FindPkgConfig
First of, the call:
include(FindPkgConfig)
should be replaced with:
find_package(PkgConfig)
The find_package() call is more flexible and allows options such as REQUIRED, that do things automatically that one would have to do manually with include().
Secondly, manually calling pkg-config should be avoid when possible. CMake comes with a rich set of package definitions, found in Linux under /usr/share/cmake-3.0/Modules/Find*cmake. These provide more options and choice for the user than a raw call to pkg_search_module().
As for the mentioned hypothetical target_use() command, CMake already has that built-in in a way with PUBLIC|PRIVATE|INTERFACE. A call like target_include_directories(mytarget PUBLIC ...) will cause the include directories to be automatically used in every target that uses mytarget, e.g. target_link_libraries(myapp mytarget). However this mechanism seems to be only for libraries created within the CMakeLists.txt file and does not work for libraries acquired with pkg_search_module(). The call add_library(bar SHARED IMPORTED) might be used for that, but I haven't yet looked into that.
As for the main question, this here works in most cases:
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
...
target_link_libraries(testapp ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
The SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER contains defines and other flags necessary for a successful compile. The flags SDL2_LIBRARY_DIRS and SDL2_LDFLAGS_OTHER are however still ignored, no idea how often that would become a problem.
More documentation here http://www.cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPkgConfig.html
If you're using cmake and pkg-config in a pretty normal way, this solution works.
If, however, you have a library that exists in some development directory (such as /home/me/hack/lib), then using other methods seen here fail to configure the linker paths. Libraries that are not found under the typical install locations would result in linker errors, like /usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lmy-hacking-library-1.0. This solution fixes the linker error for that case.
Another issue could be that the pkg-config files are not installed in the normal place, and the pkg-config paths for the project need to be added using the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable while cmake is running (see other Stack Overflow questions regarding this). This solution also works well when you use the correct pkg-config path.
Using IMPORTED_TARGET is key to solving the issues above. This solution is an improvement on this earlier answer and boils down to this final version of a working CMakeLists.txt:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14)
project(ya-project C)
# the `pkg_check_modules` function is created with this call
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
# these calls create special `PkgConfig::<MODULE>` variables
pkg_check_modules(MY_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET any-package)
pkg_check_modules(YOUR_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET ya-package)
add_executable(program-name file.c ya.c)
target_link_libraries(program-name PUBLIC
PkgConfig::MY_PKG
PkgConfig::YOUR_PKG)
Note that target_link_libraries does more than change the linker commands. It also propagates other PUBLIC properties of specified targets like compiler flags, compiler defines, include paths, etc., so, use the PUBLIC keyword with caution.
It's rare that one would only need to link with SDL2. The currently popular answer uses pkg_search_module() which checks for given modules and uses the first working one.
It is more likely that you want to link with SDL2 and SDL2_Mixer and SDL2_TTF, etc... pkg_check_modules() checks for all the given modules.
# sdl2 linking variables
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2 SDL2_ttf SDL2_mixer SDL2_image)
# your app
file(GLOB SRC "my_app/*.c")
add_executable(my_app ${SRC})
target_link_libraries(my_app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
Disclaimer: I would have simply commented on Grumbel's self answer if I had enough street creds with stackoverflow.
Most of the available answers fail to configure the headers for the pkg-config library. After meditating on the Documentation for FindPkgConfig I came up with a solution that provides those also:
include(FindPkgConfig)
if(NOT PKG_CONFIG_FOUND)
message(FATAL_ERROR "pkg-config not found!" )
endif()
pkg_check_modules(<some-lib> REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET <some-lib>)
target_link_libraries(<my-target> PkgConfig::<some-lib>)
(Substitute your target in place of <my-target> and whatever library in place of <some-lib>, accordingly.)
The IMPORTED_TARGET option seems to be key and makes everything then available under the PkgConfig:: namespace. This was all that was required and also all that should be required.
There is no such command as target_use. But I know several projects that have written such a command for their internal use. But every project want to pass additional flags or defines, thus it does not make sense to have it in general CMake. Another reason not to have it are C++ templated libraries like Eigen, there is no library but you only have a bunch of include files.
The described way is often correct. It might differ for some libraries, then you'll have to add _LDFLAGS or _CFLAGS. One more reason for not having target_use. If it does not work for you, ask a new question specific about SDL2 or whatever library you want use.
If you are looking to add definitions from the library as well, the add_definitions instruction is there for that. Documentation can be found here, along with more ways to add compiler flags.
The following code snippet uses this instruction to add GTKGL to the project:
pkg_check_modules(GTKGL REQUIRED gtkglext-1.0)
include_directories(${GTKGL_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_directories(${GTKGL_LIBRARY_DIRS})
add_definitions(${GTKGL_CFLAGS_OTHER})
set(LIBS ${LIBS} ${GTKGL_LIBRARIES})
target_link_libraries([insert name of program] ${LIBS})
Looking around on the net I have seen a lot of code like this:
include(FindPkgConfig)
pkg_search_module(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
target_include_directories(app SYSTEM PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_link_libraries(app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
However that seems to be the wrong way about doing it, as it only uses the include directories and libraries, but ignored defines, library paths and other flags that might be returned by pkg-config.
What would be the correct way to do this and ensure that all compile and link flags returned by pkg-config are used by the compiled app? And is there a single command to accomplish this, i.e. something like target_use(app SDL2)?
ref:
include()
FindPkgConfig
First of, the call:
include(FindPkgConfig)
should be replaced with:
find_package(PkgConfig)
The find_package() call is more flexible and allows options such as REQUIRED, that do things automatically that one would have to do manually with include().
Secondly, manually calling pkg-config should be avoid when possible. CMake comes with a rich set of package definitions, found in Linux under /usr/share/cmake-3.0/Modules/Find*cmake. These provide more options and choice for the user than a raw call to pkg_search_module().
As for the mentioned hypothetical target_use() command, CMake already has that built-in in a way with PUBLIC|PRIVATE|INTERFACE. A call like target_include_directories(mytarget PUBLIC ...) will cause the include directories to be automatically used in every target that uses mytarget, e.g. target_link_libraries(myapp mytarget). However this mechanism seems to be only for libraries created within the CMakeLists.txt file and does not work for libraries acquired with pkg_search_module(). The call add_library(bar SHARED IMPORTED) might be used for that, but I haven't yet looked into that.
As for the main question, this here works in most cases:
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2)
...
target_link_libraries(testapp ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(testapp PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
The SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER contains defines and other flags necessary for a successful compile. The flags SDL2_LIBRARY_DIRS and SDL2_LDFLAGS_OTHER are however still ignored, no idea how often that would become a problem.
More documentation here http://www.cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FindPkgConfig.html
If you're using cmake and pkg-config in a pretty normal way, this solution works.
If, however, you have a library that exists in some development directory (such as /home/me/hack/lib), then using other methods seen here fail to configure the linker paths. Libraries that are not found under the typical install locations would result in linker errors, like /usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lmy-hacking-library-1.0. This solution fixes the linker error for that case.
Another issue could be that the pkg-config files are not installed in the normal place, and the pkg-config paths for the project need to be added using the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable while cmake is running (see other Stack Overflow questions regarding this). This solution also works well when you use the correct pkg-config path.
Using IMPORTED_TARGET is key to solving the issues above. This solution is an improvement on this earlier answer and boils down to this final version of a working CMakeLists.txt:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.14)
project(ya-project C)
# the `pkg_check_modules` function is created with this call
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
# these calls create special `PkgConfig::<MODULE>` variables
pkg_check_modules(MY_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET any-package)
pkg_check_modules(YOUR_PKG REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET ya-package)
add_executable(program-name file.c ya.c)
target_link_libraries(program-name PUBLIC
PkgConfig::MY_PKG
PkgConfig::YOUR_PKG)
Note that target_link_libraries does more than change the linker commands. It also propagates other PUBLIC properties of specified targets like compiler flags, compiler defines, include paths, etc., so, use the PUBLIC keyword with caution.
It's rare that one would only need to link with SDL2. The currently popular answer uses pkg_search_module() which checks for given modules and uses the first working one.
It is more likely that you want to link with SDL2 and SDL2_Mixer and SDL2_TTF, etc... pkg_check_modules() checks for all the given modules.
# sdl2 linking variables
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(SDL2 REQUIRED sdl2 SDL2_ttf SDL2_mixer SDL2_image)
# your app
file(GLOB SRC "my_app/*.c")
add_executable(my_app ${SRC})
target_link_libraries(my_app ${SDL2_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
target_compile_options(my_app PUBLIC ${SDL2_CFLAGS_OTHER})
Disclaimer: I would have simply commented on Grumbel's self answer if I had enough street creds with stackoverflow.
Most of the available answers fail to configure the headers for the pkg-config library. After meditating on the Documentation for FindPkgConfig I came up with a solution that provides those also:
include(FindPkgConfig)
if(NOT PKG_CONFIG_FOUND)
message(FATAL_ERROR "pkg-config not found!" )
endif()
pkg_check_modules(<some-lib> REQUIRED IMPORTED_TARGET <some-lib>)
target_link_libraries(<my-target> PkgConfig::<some-lib>)
(Substitute your target in place of <my-target> and whatever library in place of <some-lib>, accordingly.)
The IMPORTED_TARGET option seems to be key and makes everything then available under the PkgConfig:: namespace. This was all that was required and also all that should be required.
There is no such command as target_use. But I know several projects that have written such a command for their internal use. But every project want to pass additional flags or defines, thus it does not make sense to have it in general CMake. Another reason not to have it are C++ templated libraries like Eigen, there is no library but you only have a bunch of include files.
The described way is often correct. It might differ for some libraries, then you'll have to add _LDFLAGS or _CFLAGS. One more reason for not having target_use. If it does not work for you, ask a new question specific about SDL2 or whatever library you want use.
If you are looking to add definitions from the library as well, the add_definitions instruction is there for that. Documentation can be found here, along with more ways to add compiler flags.
The following code snippet uses this instruction to add GTKGL to the project:
pkg_check_modules(GTKGL REQUIRED gtkglext-1.0)
include_directories(${GTKGL_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_directories(${GTKGL_LIBRARY_DIRS})
add_definitions(${GTKGL_CFLAGS_OTHER})
set(LIBS ${LIBS} ${GTKGL_LIBRARIES})
target_link_libraries([insert name of program] ${LIBS})
I have 2 folders "inc" and "lib" in my project which have headers and static libs respectively. How do I tell cmake to use those 2 directories for include and linking respectively?
The simplest way of doing this would be to add
include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/inc)
link_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib)
add_executable(foo ${FOO_SRCS})
target_link_libraries(foo bar) # libbar.so is found in ${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib
The modern CMake version that doesn't add the -I and -L flags to every compiler invocation would be to use imported libraries:
add_library(bar SHARED IMPORTED) # or STATIC instead of SHARED
set_target_properties(bar PROPERTIES
IMPORTED_LOCATION "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/lib/libbar.so"
INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/include/libbar"
)
set(FOO_SRCS "foo.cpp")
add_executable(foo ${FOO_SRCS})
target_link_libraries(foo bar) # also adds the required include path
If setting the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES doesn't add the path, older versions of CMake also allow you to use target_include_directories(bar PUBLIC /path/to/include). However, this no longer works with CMake 3.6 or newer.
You had better use find_library command instead of link_directories. Concretely speaking there are two ways:
designate the path within the command
find_library(NAMES gtest PATHS path1 path2 ... pathN)
set the variable CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH
set(CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH path1 path2)
find_library(NAMES gtest)
the reason is as flowings:
Note This command is rarely necessary and should be avoided where there are other choices. Prefer to pass full absolute paths to
libraries where possible, since this ensures the correct library will
always be linked. The find_library() command provides the full path,
which can generally be used directly in calls to
target_link_libraries(). Situations where a library search path may be
needed include: Project generators like Xcode where the user can
switch target architecture at build time, but a full path to a library
cannot be used because it only provides one architecture (i.e. it is
not a universal binary).
Libraries may themselves have other private library dependencies that
expect to be found via RPATH mechanisms, but some linkers are not able
to fully decode those paths (e.g. due to the presence of things like
$ORIGIN).
If a library search path must be provided, prefer to localize the
effect where possible by using the target_link_directories() command
rather than link_directories(). The target-specific command can also
control how the search directories propagate to other dependent
targets.
might fail working with link_directories, then add each static library like following:
target_link_libraries(foo /path_to_static_library/libbar.a)
I Ubuntu, I am learning about cmake and make, and just trying a simple example. I have two directories: src and build. In src, I have two files: main.cpp, and CMakeLists.txt, which has (only) the following text:
add_executable(test main.cpp)
link_directories(/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu)
target_link_libraries(test protobuf)
In /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu, there is a shared library called libprotobuf.so, which I want to link against. My main.cpp uses functions in this library, by including the releveant header file, #include <google/protobuf/message.h>.
Now, in my build directory, I run cmake ../src, and then make. However, I then get linker errors telling me that there are undefined references to some of the functions in the protobuf library. If I do a search through all the files and subdirectories in build, there is not mention of anything related to protobuf.
However, if I remove the link_directories line in my CMakeLists.txt file, and instead write the full path to the library when specifying the executable, i.e. target_link_libraries(test /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libprotobuf.so), it compiles and links fine.
Why is link_directories not allowing cmake to find this library?
Do not use link_directories like this in CMake.
This is a common beginner's mistake, as many other build environments work like this, but in CMake it's just asking for trouble. Even the official documentation specifically advises against it:
Note that this command [link_directories] is rarely necessary. Library locations returned
by find_package() and find_library() are absolute paths. Pass these
absolute library file paths directly to the target_link_libraries()
command. CMake will ensure the linker finds them.
So instead, always pass absolute paths to target_link_libraries and use find_library to resolve the link directory:
find_library(PROTOBUF_LIBRARY protobuf HINTS /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu)
target_link_libraries(test PUBLIC ${PROTOBUF_LIBRARY})
This has the huge benefit that you will probably get a diagnostic at CMake configure time if the expected library cannot be found, instead of a random linker error at compile time. Also, this allows the user to specify a library location via the GUI if the target machine has a non-standard directory layout.
So if it doesn't work right away, be sure to check the result of the find_library call and consult the official documentation to track down why it doesn't find your library as intended.
Make sure that your call to link_directories takes place before your call to the relevant add_executable.
I had mistakenly believed it only needed to be before the call to target_link_libraries, but that's not the case. After moving the call, the library is linked properly.
Make sure that the order will be link_directories, set PROJECT_LINK_LIBS, add_executable and then target_link_libraries.
Below is example to demonstarte it:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.9)
project (Logging)
include_directories(include)
file(GLOB LOGGINGSOURCES "libsrc/*.cpp")
file(GLOB SOURCES "src/*.cpp")
add_library(convertString SHARED ${LOGGINGSOURCES})
install(TARGETS convertString DESTINATION /root/Deepak/)
link_directories( /root/Deepak/ )
set(PROJECT_LINK_LIBS libconvertString.so)
add_executable(hello ${SOURCES})
target_link_libraries(hello ${PROJECT_LINK_LIBS} )
Perhaps it's very old topic but none of proposed solutions worked for me. So I had to make my own dirty hack. I do crosscompiling with buildroot and include toolchainfile.cmake.
#...
set(LIB_PATH ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/relative/path/to/your/lib)
#...
include_directories(/path/to/library/include)
set(LIB_MYLIB ${LIB_PATH}/libmylib.so)
#...
add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} ${APP_SOURCES})
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME}
${LIB_MYLIB}
)
Hope this will help
I have a project written using C++ and CMake, using Boost, that I'm trying to make a standalone binary/header package for to allow other people to link against my work. I'm using cmake installers for this. However, I'm running into issues with install(EXPORTS ...) when my library links to an external library. In particular, the Boost library and header directory locations are hard-coded into the exported file, and I can't figure out how to make it work better.
Have an example. (Untested; if it's not clear I can elaborate or fix it.)
CMakeLists.txt:
package(MyLibrary)
set(MyLibrary_VERSION 1.0)
find_component(BOOST 1.55.0 REQUIRED COMPONENTS serialization)
set(INSTALL_INCLUDE_DIR "C:/MyLibrary/include")
set(INSTALL_SRC_DIR "C:/MyLibrary/include")
set(INSTALL_BIN_DIR "C:/MyLibrary/bin")
set(INSTALL_LIB_DIR "C:/MyLibrary/lib")
set(INSTALL_CMAKE_DIR "C:/MyLibrary/cmake")
set(HEADERS myfile.hpp)
set(SOURCES myfile.cpp)
install(FILES ${HEADERS} DESTINATION ${INSTALL_INCLUDE_DIR} COMPONENT headers)
install(FILES ${SOURCES} DESTINATION ${INSTALL_SRC_DIR} COMPONENT sources)
add_library(MyLibrary STATIC
${HEADERS} ${SOURCES})
target_link_libraries(MyLibrary
${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY})
target_include_directories(MyLibrary
PUBLIC "$<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR};${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}>"
PUBLIC "$<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include;${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}>")
install(TARGETS MyLibrary EXPORT MyLibrary-depends
DESTINATION ${INSTALL_LIB_DIR} COMPONENT libraries)
configure_package_config_file(MyLibraryConfig.cmake.in
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MyLibraryConfig.cmake"
INSTALL_DESTINATION ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
write_basic_package_version_file("${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MyLibraryConfigVersion.cmake"
VERSION ${MyLibrary_VERSION}
COMPATIBILITY AnyNewerVersion)
install(FILES
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MyLibraryConfig.cmake"
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MyLibraryConfigVersion.cmake"
DESTINATION "${INSTALL_CMAKE_DIR}")
install(EXPORT MyLibrary-depends
FILE MyLibrary-depends.cmake
DESTINATION "${INSTALL_CMAKE_DIR}")
MyLibraryConfig.cmake.in
#PACKAGE_INIT#
if (NOT MyLibrary_FOUND)
set(MyLibrary_FOUND 1)
find_package(Boost 1.55.0 COMPONENTS SERIALIZATION)
include(MyLibrary-depends.cmake)
# random directory stuff, etc.
endif()
The issue is that MyProject-depends.cmake ends up with the value of ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS} and ${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY}, which are both absolute paths and screw up the portability of the install.
I've tried a couple of things, none of which seem to fix all my problems.
target_include_directories:
I tried escaping the $, with the hope that MyProject-depends.cmake would pick up the value of the Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS variable on include-time:
target_include_directories(MyProject
PUBLIC "$<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include;\${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}>"
...)
But, of course, INSTALL_INTERFACE thinks that ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS} is a relative path and prefixes it wit {$_IMPORT_DIR} which breaks everything.
I can ditch the MyProject-depends.cmake route entirely, and add it into MyProjectConfig.cmake.in:
CMakeLists.txt:
target_include_directories(MyProject
PUBLIC "$<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include>"
PUBLIC "$<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR};${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS>")
and MyProjectConfig.cmake.in:
include(MyProject-depends.cmake)
set_target_properties(MyProject
INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES "${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}")
That option seems to work but is a pain.
target_link_libraries:
I'm having more trouble with the library linking. I tried the same trick, moving stuff into the MyProjectConfig.cmake.in file for more control, but
target_link_libraries(MyProject ${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARIES})
doesn't work on imported libraries, and
set_target_properties(MyProject INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES ${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY})
fails because ${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY} expands to something like optimized;C:/boost/stage/lib/boost_serialization.lib;debug;C:/boost/stage/lib/boost_serialization.libd and set_target_properties doesn't like the keywords.
Now I'm left with some sort of remapping using
"$<$<CONFIG:DEBUG>:${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY_DEBUG}>$;<$<CONFIG:RELEASE>:${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY_RELEASE}>"
but I'll also have to detect whether or not a debug library is specified... which is doable, but seems like yak shaving to me.
So, sages of the stack... any advice? Is there some obvious module or clever method that I'm overlooking?
(And thanks for making it all the way through!
Also: the cmake install(EXPORTS ...) documentation contains the helpful line "If a library target is included in the export but a target to which it links is not included the behavior is unspecified." Yeah, basically, I'm looking for a workaround.
I ended up with the last target_link_libraries answer, ditching the built-in import structure entirely and writing the CMake module to remap
optimized;C:/boost/stage/lib/boost_serialization.lib;debug;C:/boost/stage/lib/boost_serialization.libd
into
$<$<CONFIG:DEBUG>:${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY_DEBUG}>$;<$<CONFIG:RELEASE>:${Boost_SERIALIZATION_LIBRARY_RELEASE}>
Not at all pretty, but it was the best I could come up with. So it goes.