I am trying to use a library that I wrote (is-msgs) that depends on boost::filesystem and have the following is-msgsConfig.cmake file:
include(CMakeFindDependencyMacro)
find_dependency(Protobuf)
find_dependency(spdlog)
find_dependency(Boost COMPONENTS filesystem)
include("${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/is-msgsTargets.cmake")
If I try to use the library to build an executable, for instance, everything works like expected:
find_package(is-msgs)
add_executable(example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example is-msgs::is-msgs)
Although if my executable also depends on another boost component, for instance, boost::chrono the following code will not work:
find_package(Boost REQUIRED COMPONENTS chrono)
find_package(is-msgs)
add_executable(example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example is-msgs::is-msgs boost::chrono)
Outputs:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:11 (add_executable):
Target "main" links to target "Boost::filesystem" but the target was not
found. Perhaps a find_package() call is missing for an IMPORTED target, or
an ALIAS target is missing?
However, if I reorder the find_package instructions it works without a problem:
find_package(is-msgs)
find_package(Boost REQUIRED COMPONENTS chrono)
add_executable(example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example is-msgs::is-msgs boost::chrono)
Is something wrong with my is-msgsConfig.cmake file or is this a bug in find_package(Boost) ? I am using CMake 3.11.1.
Related
When building my project, Boost_LIBRARIES doesn't contain program_options even though it is required and found. If I add it manually, it works fine. My CMake contains the following:
find_package(Boost 1.60.0 REQUIRED COMPONENTS program_options thread system regex)
message("${Boost_LIBRARIES}")
include_directories(include ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_directories(${Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS})
target_link_libraries (proj ${Boost_LIBRARIES} boost_program_options)
CMake claims that the library was found, but it is not listed in the call to message("${Boost_LIBRARIES}")
Rewrite your code for modern CMake:
find_package(Boost 1.60.0 REQUIRED COMPONENTS program_options thread system regex)
add_executable(proj ...)
target_link_libraries(proj Boost::program_options ...)
And forget about resulting Boost_BLAH_LBAH variables and include_directories + link_directories.
If smth goes wrong w/ Boost finder, add -DBoost_DEBUG=ON to cmake command line.
If smth goes wrong w/ (any/generic) find_package add -DCMAKE_FIND_DEBUG_MODE=ON.
See also for inspiration: https://steveire.wordpress.com/2017/11/05/embracing-modern-cmake/
I am not a C++ programmer, only have made a course a while ago. Using homebrew I installed libbitcoin and was hoping that I can reference the library like I was able to reference the boost libraries. I also realized that there are no links in /usr/local/bin to the Cellar.
I think I could get it working by using the absolute paths but I am looking for the proper way of handling this constellation that I just mentioned.
Current CMake:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.4)
project(cplusplus)
message(STATUS "start running cmake...")
find_package(boost 1.65.1 COMPONENTS system filesystem REQUIRED)
find_package(libbitcoin 3.3.0 COMPONENTS system filesystem REQUIRED)
message("system: ${CMAKE_SYSTEM_PREFIX_PATH}")
find_library(LIB_BITCOIN libbitcoin)
message("bitcoin: ${LIB_BITCOIN}")
if(Boost_FOUND)
message(STATUS "Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS: ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}")
message(STATUS "Boost_LIBRARIES: ${Boost_LIBRARIES}")
message(STATUS "Boost_VERSION: ${Boost_VERSION}")
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
endif()
add_executable(cplusplus main.cpp)
if(Boost_FOUND)
target_link_libraries(cplusplus ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
endif()
Currently I get these errors:
/Applications/CLion.app/Contents/bin/cmake/bin/cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug -G "CodeBlocks - Unix Makefiles" /Users/johndow/Documents/Workspace/bitcoin-code/cplusplus
-- start running cmake...
-- Boost version: 1.65.1
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:8 (find_package):
By not providing "Findlibbitcoin.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project
has asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by
"libbitcoin", but CMake did not find one.
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "libbitcoin"
(requested version 3.3.0) with any of the following names:
libbitcoinConfig.cmake
libbitcoin-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "libbitcoin" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"libbitcoin_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If
"libbitcoin" provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has
been installed.
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
See also "/Users/johndoe/Documents/Workspace/bitcoin-code/cplusplus/cmake-build-debug/CMakeFiles/CMakeOutput.log".
[Finished]
You seem to have double lookup for libbitcoin library in your CMakeLists file. You are first looking for it by:
find_package(libbitcoin ...)
and then by
find_library(LIB_BITCOIN libbitcoin)
Cmake is not happy (as your error message says) with the find_package() clause as libbitcoin does not provide cmake configuration by itself. You have many ways how to fix it, just two of them:
remove find_package() and use only find_library(), I think this is the simpler way and your project should work this way
provide cmake configuration for libbitcoin by yourself. Good introduction how to do this is here (and good to read anyway):
https://cmake.org/Wiki/CMake:How_To_Find_Libraries
As far as I know, currently libbitcoin does not export any <libbitcoin>Config.cmake package.
But it does export a libbitcoin.pc file for generic use with pkg-config.
ie: /usr/local/lib/pkgconfig/libbitcoin.pc
If you get results from invoking pkg-config --cflags libbitcoin then it's there.
And then you can put something like this in your CMakeLists.txt:
#use this if libbitcoin is installed to some custom location
set(ENV{PKG_CONFIG_PATH} "/path/to/libbitcoin/pkgconfig/:$ENV{PKG_CONFIG_PATH}")
#then later..
find_package(PkgConfig REQUIRED)
pkg_check_modules(LIB_BITCOIN REQUIRED libbitcoin)
#then later..
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME} PRIVATE ${LIB_BITCOIN_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(${PROJECT_NAME} PRIVATE ${LIB_BITCOIN_INCLUDE_DIRS})
That should pull in boost, make the libbitcoin includes visible and solve all manner of compiler and linker woes.
(Or if you are feeling mad, you could always make use of this gist).
I have the following setup for C++ development:
OS X Yosemite
CLion 140.2310.6 (a cross-plattform C/C++-IDE by JetBrains using CMake as build system)
installed boost via brew install boost into /usr/local/Cellar/boost/
Now, my goal is to setup a simple project and include the boost library. I defined just one test.cpp file that looks like this:
#include <iostream>
#include <boost>
using namespace std;
int test() {
cout << "Hello, World!" << endl;
return 0;
}
My CMakeLists.txt file looks like this:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.4)
project(MyProject)
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -std=c++11")
include_directories("/usr/local/Cellar/boost/1.57.0/include/boost")
set(SOURCE_FILES main.cpp ./test.cpp)
add_executable(MyProject ${SOURCE_FILES})
When I build the project, I get the following error:
/Users/nburk/Documents/uni/master/master_thesis/MyProject/test.cpp:2:10:
fatal error: 'boost' file not found
make[3]: *** [CMakeFiles/MyProject.dir/test.cpp.o] Error 1
make[2]: *** [CMakeFiles/MyProject.dir/all] Error 2
make[1]: *** [CMakeFiles/MyProject.dir/rule] Error 2
make: *** [MyProject] Error 2
I played around with adjusting paths here and there and also using add_library and target_link_libraries, none of which made the project build successfully.
Can someone point into the right direction how to make sure I can include boosts functionality into my CLion C++ project?
Update:
Thanks to #Waxo's answer I used the following code in my CMakeLists.txt file which:
set(Boost_INCLUDE_DIR /usr/local/Cellar/boost/1.57.0)
set(Boost_LIBRARY_DIR /usr/local/Cellar/boost/1.57.0/lib)
find_package(Boost COMPONENTS system filesystem REQUIRED)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIR})
I now got past the file not found-error, but instead I get the following:
CMake Error at /Applications/CLion
EAP.app/Contents/bin/cmake/share/cmake-3.1/Modules/FindBoost.cmake:685
(file):
file STRINGS file "/usr/local/Cellar/boost/1.57.0/boost/version.hpp" cannot be read.
Call Stack (most recent call first): CMakeLists.txt:11
(find_package)
Any ideas what I am still missing? The referred line (685) in FindBoost.cmake is:
file(STRINGS "${Boost_INCLUDE_DIR}/boost/version.hpp" _boost_VERSION_HPP_CONTENTS REGEX "#define BOOST_(LIB_)?VERSION ")
After spending the whole afternoon on the issue, I solved it myself. It was a rather stupid mistake and all the hints in #Waxo's answer were really helpful.
The reason why it wasn't working for me that I wrote #include <boost> within my test.cpp-file, which apparently is just wrong. Instead, you need to refer directly to the header files that you actually want to include, so you should rather write e.g. #include <boost/thread.hpp>.
After all, a short sequence of statements should be enough to successfully (and platform-independently) include boost into a CMake project:
find_package(Boost 1.57.0 COMPONENTS system filesystem REQUIRED)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(BoostTest main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(BoostTest ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
These lines are doing the magic here. For reference, here is a complete CMakeLists.txt file that I used for debugging in a separate command line project:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.4)
project(BoostTest)
message(STATUS "start running cmake...")
find_package(Boost 1.57.0 COMPONENTS system filesystem REQUIRED)
if(Boost_FOUND)
message(STATUS "Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS: ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}")
message(STATUS "Boost_LIBRARIES: ${Boost_LIBRARIES}")
message(STATUS "Boost_VERSION: ${Boost_VERSION}")
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
endif()
add_executable(BoostTest main.cpp)
if(Boost_FOUND)
target_link_libraries(BoostTest ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
endif()
Try using CMake find_package(Boost)
src : http://www.cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/module/FindBoost.html
It works better and CMake is made for cross compilation and giving an absolute path is not good in a CMake project.
Edit:
Look at this one too : How to link C++ program with Boost using CMake
Because you don't link actually the boost library to your executable.
CMake with boost usually looks like that :
set(Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS ON) # only find static libs
set(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON)
set(Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME OFF)
find_package(Boost 1.57.0 COMPONENTS date_time filesystem system ...)
if(Boost_FOUND)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(foo foo.cc)
target_link_libraries(foo ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
endif()
I couldn't find boost library using find_package() of clion. So my solution is download to the latest version boost from the following site:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/
After that, extract it and navigate to that folder in CMakeList.txt to include boost library.
include_directories("/path_to_external_library")
In my case, I use linux and so I put it under /usr/share/.
include_directories("/usr/share/boost_1_66_0")
I am trying to add Boost library to my project using the CMakeLists.txt in the follwing way:
set(BOOST_INCLUDEDIR "C:/boost_1_57_0")
set(BOOST_LIBRARYDIR "C:/boost_1_57_0/stage/lib")
find_package(Boost 1.57.0 COMPONENTS filesystem)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(test test.cpp)
target_link_libraries(test ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
However, I get the followng error: LINK : fatal error LNK1104: cannot open file 'libboost_filesystem-vc120-mt-1_57.lib'
libboost_filesystem-vc120-mt-1_57.lib is located in the stage/lib folder, so I don't know what is going on. I am compiling with Visual Studio 2013.
Any thoughts?
Try setting the Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS and Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED CMake variables to ON before using find_package, i.e.:
set( Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS ON )
set( Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON )
find_package( Boost 1.57.0 COMPONENTS filesystem )
I've come across this problem before and it seems as though, on multithreaded windows systems, the Boost bootstrap installer compiles multithreaded, static libraries by default. However, the CMake FindBoost script (which is used by find_package) searches for single-threaded, dynamic libraries by default.
Since you're using VS compiler I'll say you're working on Windows.
The error refers to the linker, which is failing to find boost libraries, as noticed.
Taking into account that the library exists in the boost path, my solution was to do a file(COPY) for the specific library, as a last resort.
if(WIN32)
set(BOOST_ROOT "C:/boost_1_57_0")
set(BOOST_LIBRARYDIR ${BOOST_ROOT}/stage/lib/)
endif()
find_package(Boost 1.57.0 EXACT REQUIRED system filesystem)
if(Boost_FOUND)
message(STATUS "found boost, Boost_LIBRARIES <" ${Boost_LIBRARIES} ">")
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
link_directories(${Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS})
set(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON)
set(Boost_USE_STATIC_RUNTIME OFF)
else()
message(STATUS "boost not found")
endif()
target_link_libraries(boost_test ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
file(COPY "${Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS}/boost_filesystem-vc120-mt-1_57.dll" DESTINATION "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}")
You may add some log messages to the CMake in order to know the values returned in the
find_package.
Make sure the architecture (x64) matches.
$ cmake -A x64 ..
Use link_directories command before adding executables just like include_directories.
link_directories(${Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS})
I am trying to get a simple boost.log example running on Linux using GCC 4.4.5, CMake 2.8.2 and Boost 1.53.0.
Compiling boost and boost log succeeded, but I keep getting issues when linking my test program to boost.log.
I use the following CMakeLists.txt file:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
project(QuantibBoostLogTest)
# Include boost headers
set(Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS ON)
set(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON)
find_package(Threads)
find_package(Boost 1.53.0 COMPONENTS thread date_time filesystem system log log_setup REQUIRED)
if(Boost_FOUND)
include_directories( ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS} )
link_libraries(${CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT} ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
else(Boost_FOUND)
message(FATAL_ERROR "Cannot build Quantib Boost Log test without Boost. Please set Boost_DIR.")
endif(Boost_FOUND)
add_executable(quantibBoostLogTest boost_log_test.cxx)
install(TARGETS quantibBoostLogTest DESTINATION .)
CMake does detect the boost libraries correctly, but I still get linker errors, mostly of the form:
core.cpp:(.text+0x1b0e): undefined reference to `boost::detail::get_tss_data(void const*)'
I do link the thread libraries. Does anybody know how to solve this?
It seems like boost.log depends on boost.thread library then you need change order of libraries. See why link order does matter
Try following order
find_package(Boost 1.53.0 COMPONENTS log log_setup thread date_time filesystem system REQUIRED)
if it will not help try include them two times as following
link_libraries(${CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT} ${Boost_LIBRARIES} ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
The linker error you give has something to do with either not linking against a native threading library like pthreads and/or boost_thread. (or both)
1)
From what I see you don't link against pthreads library.
By merely calling a CMake custom module that tries to find the library doesn't mean it'll also link against it.
Try and do:
SET(CMAKE_THREAD_PREFER_PTHREAD true)
FIND_PACKAGE (Threads)
IF(Threads_FOUND)
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES(SYSTEM ${Threads_INCLUDE_DIR})
MESSAGE("Are we using pthreads? ${CMAKE_USE_PTHREADS_INIT}")
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(${PROJECT_NAME} ${CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT})
ENDIF()
Check the FindThreads.cmake file of the CMake installation you have for more information regarding the use of the threads module.
You can usually find it in /usr/share/cmake-2.8/Modules/
2) Maybe the ordering of the linked Boost libraries is incorrect or the version you specified for Boost is invalid.
Try changing the boost version or don't specify it at all or change the order of the linked libraries
SET(Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS ON)
SET(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON)
FIND_PACKAGE(Boost 1.53.0 COMPONENTS **system thread filesystem date_time log log_setup** REQUIRED)
IF(Boost_FOUND)
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES(SYSTEM ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIR})
LINK_DIRECTORIES(${Boost_LIBRARY_DIR})
MESSAGE("Boost information")
MESSAGE("Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS: ${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS}")
MESSAGE("Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS: ${Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS}")
MESSAGE("Boost Libraries: ${Boost_LIBRARIES}")
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(${PROJECT_NAME} ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
ENDIF()
(The second contention might be completely wrong as I think the ordering of the elements specified after COMPONENTS in FIND_PACKAGE doesn't matter)