cmake-buildsystem.7.rst 37 KB

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  1. .. cmake-manual-description: CMake Buildsystem Reference
  2. cmake-buildsystem(7)
  3. ********************
  4. .. only:: html
  5. .. contents::
  6. Introduction
  7. ============
  8. A CMake-based buildsystem is organized as a set of high-level logical
  9. targets. Each target corresponds to an executable or library, or
  10. is a custom target containing custom commands. Dependencies between the
  11. targets are expressed in the buildsystem to determine the build order
  12. and the rules for regeneration in response to change.
  13. Binary Targets
  14. ==============
  15. Executables and libraries are defined using the :command:`add_executable`
  16. and :command:`add_library` commands. The resulting binary files have
  17. appropriate prefixes, suffixes and extensions for the platform targeted.
  18. Dependencies between binary targets are expressed using the
  19. :command:`target_link_libraries` command:
  20. .. code-block:: cmake
  21. add_library(archive archive.cpp zip.cpp lzma.cpp)
  22. add_executable(zipapp zipapp.cpp)
  23. target_link_libraries(zipapp archive)
  24. ``archive`` is defined as a static library -- an archive containing objects
  25. compiled from ``archive.cpp``, ``zip.cpp``, and ``lzma.cpp``. ``zipapp``
  26. is defined as an executable formed by compiling and linking ``zipapp.cpp``.
  27. When linking the ``zipapp`` executable, the ``archive`` static library is
  28. linked in.
  29. Binary Executables
  30. ------------------
  31. The :command:`add_executable` command defines an executable target:
  32. .. code-block:: cmake
  33. add_executable(mytool mytool.cpp)
  34. Commands such as :command:`add_custom_command`, which generates rules to be
  35. run at build time can transparently use an :prop_tgt:`EXECUTABLE <TYPE>`
  36. target as a ``COMMAND`` executable. The buildsystem rules will ensure that
  37. the executable is built before attempting to run the command.
  38. Binary Library Types
  39. --------------------
  40. .. _`Normal Libraries`:
  41. Normal Libraries
  42. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  43. By default, the :command:`add_library` command defines a static library,
  44. unless a type is specified. A type may be specified when using the command:
  45. .. code-block:: cmake
  46. add_library(archive SHARED archive.cpp zip.cpp lzma.cpp)
  47. .. code-block:: cmake
  48. add_library(archive STATIC archive.cpp zip.cpp lzma.cpp)
  49. The :variable:`BUILD_SHARED_LIBS` variable may be enabled to change the
  50. behavior of :command:`add_library` to build shared libraries by default.
  51. In the context of the buildsystem definition as a whole, it is largely
  52. irrelevant whether particular libraries are ``SHARED`` or ``STATIC`` --
  53. the commands, dependency specifications and other APIs work similarly
  54. regardless of the library type. The ``MODULE`` library type is
  55. dissimilar in that it is generally not linked to -- it is not used in
  56. the right-hand-side of the :command:`target_link_libraries` command.
  57. It is a type which is loaded as a plugin using runtime techniques.
  58. .. code-block:: cmake
  59. add_library(archive MODULE 7z.cpp)
  60. .. _`Object Libraries`:
  61. Object Libraries
  62. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  63. The ``OBJECT`` library type is also not linked to. It defines a non-archival
  64. collection of object files resulting from compiling the given source files.
  65. The object files collection can be used as source inputs to other targets:
  66. .. code-block:: cmake
  67. add_library(archive OBJECT archive.cpp zip.cpp lzma.cpp)
  68. add_library(archiveExtras STATIC $<TARGET_OBJECTS:archive> extras.cpp)
  69. add_executable(test_exe $<TARGET_OBJECTS:archive> test.cpp)
  70. ``OBJECT`` libraries may only be used locally as sources in a buildsystem --
  71. they may not be installed, exported, or used in the right hand side of
  72. :command:`target_link_libraries`. They also may not be used as the ``TARGET``
  73. in a use of the :command:`add_custom_command(TARGET)` command signature.
  74. Although object libraries may not be named directly in calls to
  75. the :command:`target_link_libraries` command, they can be "linked"
  76. indirectly by using an :ref:`Interface Library <Interface Libraries>`
  77. whose :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_SOURCES` target property is set to name
  78. ``$<TARGET_OBJECTS:objlib>``.
  79. Build Specification and Usage Requirements
  80. ==========================================
  81. The :command:`target_include_directories`, :command:`target_compile_definitions`
  82. and :command:`target_compile_options` commands specify the build specifications
  83. and the usage requirements of binary targets. The commands populate the
  84. :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`, :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` and
  85. :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_OPTIONS` target properties respectively, and/or the
  86. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`, :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS`
  87. and :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_OPTIONS` target properties.
  88. Each of the commands has a ``PRIVATE``, ``PUBLIC`` and ``INTERFACE`` mode. The
  89. ``PRIVATE`` mode populates only the non-``INTERFACE_`` variant of the target
  90. property and the ``INTERFACE`` mode populates only the ``INTERFACE_`` variants.
  91. The ``PUBLIC`` mode populates both variants of the repective target property.
  92. Each command may be invoked with multiple uses of each keyword:
  93. .. code-block:: cmake
  94. target_compile_definitions(archive
  95. PRIVATE BUILDING_WITH_LZMA
  96. INTERFACE USING_ARCHIVE_LIB
  97. )
  98. Note that usage requirements are not designed as a way to make downstreams
  99. use particular :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_OPTIONS` or
  100. :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` etc for convenience only. The contents of
  101. the properties must be **requirements**, not merely recommendations or
  102. convenience.
  103. See the :ref:`Creating Relocatable Packages` section of the
  104. :manual:`cmake-packages(7)` manual for discussion of additional care
  105. that must be taken when specifying usage requirements while creating
  106. packages for redistribution.
  107. Target Properties
  108. -----------------
  109. The contents of the :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`,
  110. :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` and :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_OPTIONS` target
  111. properties are used appropriately when compiling the source files of a
  112. binary target.
  113. Entries in the :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` are added to the compile line
  114. with ``-I`` or ``-isystem`` prefixes and in the order of appearance in the
  115. property value.
  116. Entries in the :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` are prefixed with ``-D`` or
  117. ``/D`` and added to the compile line in an unspecified order. The
  118. :prop_tgt:`DEFINE_SYMBOL` target property is also added as a compile
  119. definition as a special convenience case for ``SHARED`` and ``MODULE``
  120. library targets.
  121. Entries in the :prop_tgt:`COMPILE_OPTIONS` are escaped for the shell and added
  122. in the order of appearance in the property value. Several compile options have
  123. special separate handling, such as :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE`.
  124. The contents of the :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`,
  125. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` and
  126. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_OPTIONS` target properties are
  127. *Usage Requirements* -- they specify content which consumers
  128. must use to correctly compile and link with the target they appear on.
  129. For any binary target, the contents of each ``INTERFACE_`` property on
  130. each target specified in a :command:`target_link_libraries` command is
  131. consumed:
  132. .. code-block:: cmake
  133. set(srcs archive.cpp zip.cpp)
  134. if (LZMA_FOUND)
  135. list(APPEND srcs lzma.cpp)
  136. endif()
  137. add_library(archive SHARED ${srcs})
  138. if (LZMA_FOUND)
  139. # The archive library sources are compiled with -DBUILDING_WITH_LZMA
  140. target_compile_definitions(archive PRIVATE BUILDING_WITH_LZMA)
  141. endif()
  142. target_compile_definitions(archive INTERFACE USING_ARCHIVE_LIB)
  143. add_executable(consumer)
  144. # Link consumer to archive and consume its usage requirements. The consumer
  145. # executable sources are compiled with -DUSING_ARCHIVE_LIB.
  146. target_link_libraries(consumer archive)
  147. Because it is common to require that the source directory and corresponding
  148. build directory are added to the :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`, the
  149. :variable:`CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR` variable can be enabled to conveniently
  150. add the corresponding directories to the :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of
  151. all targets. The variable :variable:`CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR_IN_INTERFACE`
  152. can be enabled to add the corresponding directories to the
  153. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of all targets. This makes use of
  154. targets in multiple different directories convenient through use of the
  155. :command:`target_link_libraries` command.
  156. .. _`Target Usage Requirements`:
  157. Transitive Usage Requirements
  158. -----------------------------
  159. The usage requirements of a target can transitively propagate to dependents.
  160. The :command:`target_link_libraries` command has ``PRIVATE``,
  161. ``INTERFACE`` and ``PUBLIC`` keywords to control the propagation.
  162. .. code-block:: cmake
  163. add_library(archive archive.cpp)
  164. target_compile_definitions(archive INTERFACE USING_ARCHIVE_LIB)
  165. add_library(serialization serialization.cpp)
  166. target_compile_definitions(serialization INTERFACE USING_SERIALIZATION_LIB)
  167. add_library(archiveExtras extras.cpp)
  168. target_link_libraries(archiveExtras PUBLIC archive)
  169. target_link_libraries(archiveExtras PRIVATE serialization)
  170. # archiveExtras is compiled with -DUSING_ARCHIVE_LIB
  171. # and -DUSING_SERIALIZATION_LIB
  172. add_executable(consumer consumer.cpp)
  173. # consumer is compiled with -DUSING_ARCHIVE_LIB
  174. target_link_libraries(consumer archiveExtras)
  175. Because ``archive`` is a ``PUBLIC`` dependency of ``archiveExtras``, the
  176. usage requirements of it are propagated to ``consumer`` too. Because
  177. ``serialization`` is a ``PRIVATE`` dependency of ``archive``, the usage
  178. requirements of it are not propagated to ``consumer``.
  179. Generally, a dependency should be specified in a use of
  180. :command:`target_link_libraries` with the ``PRIVATE`` keyword if it is used by
  181. only the implementation of a library, and not in the header files. If a
  182. dependency is additionally used in the header files of a library (e.g. for
  183. class inheritance), then it should be specified as a ``PUBLIC`` dependency.
  184. A dependency which is not used by the implementation of a library, but only by
  185. its headers should be specified as an ``INTERFACE`` dependency. The
  186. :command:`target_link_libraries` command may be invoked with multiple uses of
  187. each keyword:
  188. .. code-block:: cmake
  189. target_link_libraries(archiveExtras
  190. PUBLIC archive
  191. PRIVATE serialization
  192. )
  193. Usage requirements are propagated by reading the ``INTERFACE_`` variants
  194. of target properties from dependencies and appending the values to the
  195. non-``INTERFACE_`` variants of the operand. For example, the
  196. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of dependencies is read and
  197. appended to the :prop_tgt:`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of the operand. In cases
  198. where order is relevant and maintained, and the order resulting from the
  199. :command:`target_link_libraries` calls does not allow correct compilation,
  200. use of an appropriate command to set the property directly may update the
  201. order.
  202. For example, if the linked libraries for a target must be specified
  203. in the order ``lib1`` ``lib2`` ``lib3`` , but the include directories must
  204. be specified in the order ``lib3`` ``lib1`` ``lib2``:
  205. .. code-block:: cmake
  206. target_link_libraries(myExe lib1 lib2 lib3)
  207. target_include_directories(myExe
  208. PRIVATE $<TARGET_PROPERTY:lib3,INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>)
  209. Note that care must be taken when specifying usage requirements for targets
  210. which will be exported for installation using the :command:`install(EXPORT)`
  211. command. See :ref:`Creating Packages` for more.
  212. .. _`Compatible Interface Properties`:
  213. Compatible Interface Properties
  214. -------------------------------
  215. Some target properties are required to be compatible between a target and
  216. the interface of each dependency. For example, the
  217. :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` target property may specify a
  218. boolean value of whether a target should be compiled as
  219. position-independent-code, which has platform-specific consequences.
  220. A target may also specify the usage requirement
  221. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` to communicate that
  222. consumers must be compiled as position-independent-code.
  223. .. code-block:: cmake
  224. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  225. set_property(TARGET exe1 PROPERTY POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE ON)
  226. add_library(lib1 SHARED lib1.cpp)
  227. set_property(TARGET lib1 PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE ON)
  228. add_executable(exe2 exe2.cpp)
  229. target_link_libraries(exe2 lib1)
  230. Here, both ``exe1`` and ``exe2`` will be compiled as position-independent-code.
  231. ``lib1`` will also be compiled as position-independent-code because that is the
  232. default setting for ``SHARED`` libraries. If dependencies have conflicting,
  233. non-compatible requirements :manual:`cmake(1)` issues a diagnostic:
  234. .. code-block:: cmake
  235. add_library(lib1 SHARED lib1.cpp)
  236. set_property(TARGET lib1 PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE ON)
  237. add_library(lib2 SHARED lib2.cpp)
  238. set_property(TARGET lib2 PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE OFF)
  239. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  240. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1)
  241. set_property(TARGET exe1 PROPERTY POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE OFF)
  242. add_executable(exe2 exe2.cpp)
  243. target_link_libraries(exe2 lib1 lib2)
  244. The ``lib1`` requirement ``INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE`` is not
  245. "compatible" with the ``POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE`` property of the ``exe1``
  246. target. The library requires that consumers are built as
  247. position-independent-code, while the executable specifies to not built as
  248. position-independent-code, so a diagnostic is issued.
  249. The ``lib1`` and ``lib2`` requirements are not "compatible". One of them
  250. requires that consumers are built as position-independent-code, while
  251. the other requires that consumers are not built as position-independent-code.
  252. Because ``exe2`` links to both and they are in conflict, a diagnostic is
  253. issued.
  254. To be "compatible", the :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` property,
  255. if set must be either the same, in a boolean sense, as the
  256. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` property of all transitively
  257. specified dependencies on which that property is set.
  258. This property of "compatible interface requirement" may be extended to other
  259. properties by specifying the property in the content of the
  260. :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_BOOL` target property. Each specified property
  261. must be compatible between the consuming target and the corresponding property
  262. with an ``INTERFACE_`` prefix from each dependency:
  263. .. code-block:: cmake
  264. add_library(lib1Version2 SHARED lib1_v2.cpp)
  265. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 PROPERTY INTERFACE_CUSTOM_PROP ON)
  266. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 APPEND PROPERTY
  267. COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_BOOL CUSTOM_PROP
  268. )
  269. add_library(lib1Version3 SHARED lib1_v3.cpp)
  270. set_property(TARGET lib1Version3 PROPERTY INTERFACE_CUSTOM_PROP OFF)
  271. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  272. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1Version2) # CUSTOM_PROP will be ON
  273. add_executable(exe2 exe2.cpp)
  274. target_link_libraries(exe2 lib1Version2 lib1Version3) # Diagnostic
  275. Non-boolean properties may also participate in "compatible interface"
  276. computations. Properties specified in the
  277. :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_STRING`
  278. property must be either unspecified or compare to the same string among
  279. all transitively specified dependencies. This can be useful to ensure
  280. that multiple incompatible versions of a library are not linked together
  281. through transitive requirements of a target:
  282. .. code-block:: cmake
  283. add_library(lib1Version2 SHARED lib1_v2.cpp)
  284. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 PROPERTY INTERFACE_LIB_VERSION 2)
  285. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 APPEND PROPERTY
  286. COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_STRING LIB_VERSION
  287. )
  288. add_library(lib1Version3 SHARED lib1_v3.cpp)
  289. set_property(TARGET lib1Version3 PROPERTY INTERFACE_LIB_VERSION 3)
  290. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  291. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1Version2) # LIB_VERSION will be "2"
  292. add_executable(exe2 exe2.cpp)
  293. target_link_libraries(exe2 lib1Version2 lib1Version3) # Diagnostic
  294. The :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MAX` target property specifies
  295. that content will be evaluated numerically and the maximum number among all
  296. specified will be calculated:
  297. .. code-block:: cmake
  298. add_library(lib1Version2 SHARED lib1_v2.cpp)
  299. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 PROPERTY INTERFACE_CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED 200)
  300. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 APPEND PROPERTY
  301. COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MAX CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED
  302. )
  303. add_library(lib1Version3 SHARED lib1_v3.cpp)
  304. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 PROPERTY INTERFACE_CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED 1000)
  305. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  306. # CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED will be "200"
  307. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1Version2)
  308. add_executable(exe2 exe2.cpp)
  309. # CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED will be "1000"
  310. target_link_libraries(exe2 lib1Version2 lib1Version3)
  311. Similarly, the :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MIN` may be used to
  312. calculate the numeric minimum value for a property from dependencies.
  313. Each calculated "compatible" property value may be read in the consumer at
  314. generate-time using generator expressions.
  315. Note that for each dependee, the set of properties specified in each
  316. compatible interface property must not intersect with the set specified in
  317. any of the other properties.
  318. Property Origin Debugging
  319. -------------------------
  320. Because build specifications can be determined by dependencies, the lack of
  321. locality of code which creates a target and code which is responsible for
  322. setting build specifications may make the code more difficult to reason about.
  323. :manual:`cmake(1)` provides a debugging facility to print the origin of the
  324. contents of properties which may be determined by dependencies. The properties
  325. which can be debugged are listed in the
  326. :variable:`CMAKE_DEBUG_TARGET_PROPERTIES` variable documentation:
  327. .. code-block:: cmake
  328. set(CMAKE_DEBUG_TARGET_PROPERTIES
  329. INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
  330. COMPILE_DEFINITIONS
  331. POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE
  332. CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED
  333. LIB_VERSION
  334. )
  335. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  336. In the case of properties listed in :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_BOOL` or
  337. :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_STRING`, the debug output shows which target
  338. was responsible for setting the property, and which other dependencies also
  339. defined the property. In the case of
  340. :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MAX` and
  341. :prop_tgt:`COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MIN`, the debug output shows the
  342. value of the property from each dependency, and whether the value determines
  343. the new extreme.
  344. Build Specification with Generator Expressions
  345. ----------------------------------------------
  346. Build specifications may use
  347. :manual:`generator expressions <cmake-generator-expressions(7)>` containing
  348. content which may be conditional or known only at generate-time. For example,
  349. the calculated "compatible" value of a property may be read with the
  350. ``TARGET_PROPERTY`` expression:
  351. .. code-block:: cmake
  352. add_library(lib1Version2 SHARED lib1_v2.cpp)
  353. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 PROPERTY
  354. INTERFACE_CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED 200)
  355. set_property(TARGET lib1Version2 APPEND PROPERTY
  356. COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_NUMBER_MAX CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED
  357. )
  358. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  359. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1Version2)
  360. target_compile_definitions(exe1 PRIVATE
  361. CONTAINER_SIZE=$<TARGET_PROPERTY:CONTAINER_SIZE_REQUIRED>
  362. )
  363. In this case, the ``exe1`` source files will be compiled with
  364. ``-DCONTAINER_SIZE=200``.
  365. Configuration determined build specifications may be conveniently set using
  366. the ``CONFIG`` generator expression.
  367. .. code-block:: cmake
  368. target_compile_definitions(exe1 PRIVATE
  369. $<$<CONFIG:Debug>:DEBUG_BUILD>
  370. )
  371. The ``CONFIG`` parameter is compared case-insensitively with the configuration
  372. being built. In the presence of :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets, the content of
  373. :prop_tgt:`MAP_IMPORTED_CONFIG_DEBUG <MAP_IMPORTED_CONFIG_<CONFIG>>` is also
  374. accounted for by this expression.
  375. Some buildsystems generated by :manual:`cmake(1)` have a predetermined
  376. build-configuration set in the :variable:`CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE` variable. The
  377. buildsystem for the IDEs such as Visual Studio and Xcode are generated
  378. independent of the build-configuration, and the actual build configuration
  379. is not known until build-time. Therefore, code such as
  380. .. code-block:: cmake
  381. string(TOLOWER ${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE} _type)
  382. if (_type STREQUAL debug)
  383. target_compile_definitions(exe1 PRIVATE DEBUG_BUILD)
  384. endif()
  385. may appear to work for ``Makefile`` based and ``Ninja`` generators, but is not
  386. portable to IDE generators. Additionally, the :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED`
  387. configuration-mappings are not accounted for with code like this, so it should
  388. be avoided.
  389. The unary ``TARGET_PROPERTY`` generator expression and the ``TARGET_POLICY``
  390. generator expression are evaluated with the consuming target context. This
  391. means that a usage requirement specification may be evaluated differently based
  392. on the consumer:
  393. .. code-block:: cmake
  394. add_library(lib1 lib1.cpp)
  395. target_compile_definitions(lib1 INTERFACE
  396. $<$<STREQUAL:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:TYPE>,EXECUTABLE>:LIB1_WITH_EXE>
  397. $<$<STREQUAL:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:TYPE>,SHARED_LIBRARY>:LIB1_WITH_SHARED_LIB>
  398. $<$<TARGET_POLICY:CMP0041>:CONSUMER_CMP0041_NEW>
  399. )
  400. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  401. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1)
  402. cmake_policy(SET CMP0041 NEW)
  403. add_library(shared_lib shared_lib.cpp)
  404. target_link_libraries(shared_lib lib1)
  405. The ``exe1`` executable will be compiled with ``-DLIB1_WITH_EXE``, while the
  406. ``shared_lib`` shared library will be compiled with ``-DLIB1_WITH_SHARED_LIB``
  407. and ``-DCONSUMER_CMP0041_NEW``, because policy :policy:`CMP0041` is
  408. ``NEW`` at the point where the ``shared_lib`` target is created.
  409. The ``BUILD_INTERFACE`` expression wraps requirements which are only used when
  410. consumed from a target in the same buildsystem, or when consumed from a target
  411. exported to the build directory using the :command:`export` command. The
  412. ``INSTALL_INTERFACE`` expression wraps requirements which are only used when
  413. consumed from a target which has been installed and exported with the
  414. :command:`install(EXPORT)` command:
  415. .. code-block:: cmake
  416. add_library(ClimbingStats climbingstats.cpp)
  417. target_compile_definitions(ClimbingStats INTERFACE
  418. $<BUILD_INTERFACE:ClimbingStats_FROM_BUILD_LOCATION>
  419. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:ClimbingStats_FROM_INSTALLED_LOCATION>
  420. )
  421. install(TARGETS ClimbingStats EXPORT libExport ${InstallArgs})
  422. install(EXPORT libExport NAMESPACE Upstream::
  423. DESTINATION lib/cmake/ClimbingStats)
  424. export(EXPORT libExport NAMESPACE Upstream::)
  425. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  426. target_link_libraries(exe1 ClimbingStats)
  427. In this case, the ``exe1`` executable will be compiled with
  428. ``-DClimbingStats_FROM_BUILD_LOCATION``. The exporting commands generate
  429. :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets with either the ``INSTALL_INTERFACE`` or the
  430. ``BUILD_INTERFACE`` omitted, and the ``*_INTERFACE`` marker stripped away.
  431. A separate project consuming the ``ClimbingStats`` package would contain:
  432. .. code-block:: cmake
  433. find_package(ClimbingStats REQUIRED)
  434. add_executable(Downstream main.cpp)
  435. target_link_libraries(Downstream Upstream::ClimbingStats)
  436. Depending on whether the ``ClimbingStats`` package was used from the build
  437. location or the install location, the ``Downstream`` target would be compiled
  438. with either ``-DClimbingStats_FROM_BUILD_LOCATION`` or
  439. ``-DClimbingStats_FROM_INSTALL_LOCATION``. For more about packages and
  440. exporting see the :manual:`cmake-packages(7)` manual.
  441. .. _`Include Directories and Usage Requirements`:
  442. Include Directories and Usage Requirements
  443. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  444. Include directories require some special consideration when specified as usage
  445. requirements and when used with generator expressions. The
  446. :command:`target_include_directories` command accepts both relative and
  447. absolute include directories:
  448. .. code-block:: cmake
  449. add_library(lib1 lib1.cpp)
  450. target_include_directories(lib1 PRIVATE
  451. /absolute/path
  452. relative/path
  453. )
  454. Relative paths are interpreted relative to the source directory where the
  455. command appears. Relative paths are not allowed in the
  456. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets.
  457. In cases where a non-trivial generator expression is used, the
  458. ``INSTALL_PREFIX`` expression may be used within the argument of an
  459. ``INSTALL_INTERFACE`` expression. It is a replacement marker which
  460. expands to the installation prefix when imported by a consuming project.
  461. Include directories usage requirements commonly differ between the build-tree
  462. and the install-tree. The ``BUILD_INTERFACE`` and ``INSTALL_INTERFACE``
  463. generator expressions can be used to describe separate usage requirements
  464. based on the usage location. Relative paths are allowed within the
  465. ``INSTALL_INTERFACE`` expression and are interpreted relative to the
  466. installation prefix. For example:
  467. .. code-block:: cmake
  468. add_library(ClimbingStats climbingstats.cpp)
  469. target_include_directories(ClimbingStats INTERFACE
  470. $<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/generated>
  471. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:/absolute/path>
  472. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:relative/path>
  473. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:$<INSTALL_PREFIX>/$<CONFIG>/generated>
  474. )
  475. Two convenience APIs are provided relating to include directories usage
  476. requirements. The :variable:`CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR_IN_INTERFACE` variable
  477. may be enabled, with an equivalent effect to:
  478. .. code-block:: cmake
  479. set_property(TARGET tgt APPEND PROPERTY
  480. $<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR};${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}>
  481. )
  482. for each target affected. The convenience for installed targets is
  483. an ``INCLUDES DESTINATION`` component with the :command:`install(TARGETS)`
  484. command:
  485. .. code-block:: cmake
  486. install(TARGETS foo bar bat EXPORT tgts ${dest_args}
  487. INCLUDES DESTINATION include
  488. )
  489. install(EXPORT tgts ${other_args})
  490. install(FILES ${headers} DESTINATION include)
  491. This is equivalent to appending ``${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX}/include`` to the
  492. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of each of the installed
  493. :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets when generated by :command:`install(EXPORT)`.
  494. When the :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of an
  495. :ref:`imported target <Imported targets>` is consumed, the entries in the
  496. property are treated as ``SYSTEM`` include directories, as if they were
  497. listed in the :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_SYSTEM_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` of the
  498. dependency. This can result in omission of compiler warnings for headers
  499. found in those directories. This behavior for :ref:`imported targets` may
  500. be controlled with the :prop_tgt:`NO_SYSTEM_FROM_IMPORTED` target property.
  501. If a binary target is linked transitively to a Mac OX framework, the
  502. ``Headers`` directory of the framework is also treated as a usage requirement.
  503. This has the same effect as passing the framework directory as an include
  504. directory.
  505. Link Libraries and Generator Expressions
  506. ----------------------------------------
  507. Like build specifications, :prop_tgt:`link libraries <LINK_LIBRARIES>` may be
  508. specified with generator expression conditions. However, as consumption of
  509. usage requirements is based on collection from linked dependencies, there is
  510. an additional limitation that the link dependencies must form a "directed
  511. acyclic graph". That is, if linking to a target is dependent on the value of
  512. a target property, that target property may not be dependent on the linked
  513. dependencies:
  514. .. code-block:: cmake
  515. add_library(lib1 lib1.cpp)
  516. add_library(lib2 lib2.cpp)
  517. target_link_libraries(lib1 PUBLIC
  518. $<$<TARGET_PROPERTY:POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE>:lib2>
  519. )
  520. add_library(lib3 lib3.cpp)
  521. set_property(TARGET lib3 PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE ON)
  522. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  523. target_link_libraries(exe1 lib1 lib3)
  524. As the value of the :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` property of
  525. the ``exe1`` target is dependent on the linked libraries (``lib3``), and the
  526. edge of linking ``exe1`` is determined by the same
  527. :prop_tgt:`POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE` property, the dependency graph above
  528. contains a cycle. :manual:`cmake(1)` issues a diagnostic in this case.
  529. .. _`Output Artifacts`:
  530. Output Artifacts
  531. ----------------
  532. The buildsystem targets created by the :command:`add_library` and
  533. :command:`add_executable` commands create rules to create binary outputs.
  534. The exact output location of the binaries can only be determined at
  535. generate-time because it can depend on the build-configuration and the
  536. link-language of linked dependencies etc. ``TARGET_FILE``,
  537. ``TARGET_LINKER_FILE`` and related expressions can be used to access the
  538. name and location of generated binaries. These expressions do not work
  539. for ``OBJECT`` libraries however, as there is no single file generated
  540. by such libraries which is relevant to the expressions.
  541. There are three kinds of output artifacts that may be build by targets
  542. as detailed in the following sections. Their classification differs
  543. between DLL platforms and non-DLL platforms. All Windows-based
  544. systems including Cygwin are DLL platforms.
  545. .. _`Runtime Output Artifacts`:
  546. Runtime Output Artifacts
  547. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  548. A *runtime* output artifact of a buildsystem target may be:
  549. * The executable file (e.g. ``.exe``) of an executable target
  550. created by the :command:`add_executable` command.
  551. * On DLL platforms: the executable file (e.g. ``.dll``) of a shared
  552. library target created by the :command:`add_library` command
  553. with the ``SHARED`` option.
  554. The :prop_tgt:`RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` and :prop_tgt:`RUNTIME_OUTPUT_NAME`
  555. target properties may be used to control runtime output artifact locations
  556. and names in the build tree.
  557. .. _`Library Output Artifacts`:
  558. Library Output Artifacts
  559. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  560. A *library* output artifact of a buildsystem target may be:
  561. * The loadable module file (e.g. ``.dll`` or ``.so``) of a module
  562. library target created by the :command:`add_library` command
  563. with the ``MODULE`` option.
  564. * On non-DLL platforms: the shared library file (e.g. ``.so`` or ``.dylib``)
  565. of a shared shared library target created by the :command:`add_library`
  566. command with the ``SHARED`` option.
  567. The :prop_tgt:`LIBRARY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` and :prop_tgt:`LIBRARY_OUTPUT_NAME`
  568. target properties may be used to control library output artifact locations
  569. and names in the build tree.
  570. .. _`Archive Output Artifacts`:
  571. Archive Output Artifacts
  572. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  573. An *archive* output artifact of a buildsystem target may be:
  574. * The static library file (e.g. ``.lib`` or ``.a``) of a static
  575. library target created by the :command:`add_library` command
  576. with the ``STATIC`` option.
  577. * On DLL platforms: the import library file (e.g. ``.lib``) of a shared
  578. library target created by the :command:`add_library` command
  579. with the ``SHARED`` option.
  580. * On DLL platforms: the import library file (e.g. ``.lib``) of an
  581. executable target created by the :command:`add_executable` command
  582. when its :prop_tgt:`ENABLE_EXPORTS` target property is set.
  583. The :prop_tgt:`ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` and :prop_tgt:`ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME`
  584. target properties may be used to control archive output artifact locations
  585. and names in the build tree.
  586. Directory-Scoped Commands
  587. -------------------------
  588. The :command:`target_include_directories`,
  589. :command:`target_compile_definitions` and
  590. :command:`target_compile_options` commands have an effect on only one
  591. target at a time. The commands :command:`add_definitions`,
  592. :command:`add_compile_options` and :command:`include_directories` have
  593. a similar function, but operate at directory scope instead of target
  594. scope for convenience.
  595. Pseudo Targets
  596. ==============
  597. Some target types do not represent outputs of the buildsystem, but only inputs
  598. such as external dependencies, aliases or other non-build artifacts. Pseudo
  599. targets are not represented in the generated buildsystem.
  600. .. _`Imported Targets`:
  601. Imported Targets
  602. ----------------
  603. An :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target represents a pre-existing dependency. Usually
  604. such targets are defined by an upstream package and should be treated as
  605. immutable. It is not possible to use an :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target in the
  606. left-hand-side of the :command:`target_compile_definitions`,
  607. :command:`target_include_directories`, :command:`target_compile_options` or
  608. :command:`target_link_libraries` commands, as that would be an attempt to
  609. modify it. :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets are designed to be used only in the
  610. right-hand-side of those commands.
  611. :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets may have the same usage requirement properties
  612. populated as binary targets, such as
  613. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`,
  614. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS`,
  615. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_OPTIONS`,
  616. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES`, and
  617. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE`.
  618. The :prop_tgt:`LOCATION` may also be read from an IMPORTED target, though there
  619. is rarely reason to do so. Commands such as :command:`add_custom_command` can
  620. transparently use an :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` :prop_tgt:`EXECUTABLE <TYPE>` target
  621. as a ``COMMAND`` executable.
  622. The scope of the definition of an :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target is the directory
  623. where it was defined. It may be accessed and used from subdirectories, but
  624. not from parent directories or sibling directories. The scope is similar to
  625. the scope of a cmake variable.
  626. It is also possible to define a ``GLOBAL`` :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target which is
  627. accessible globally in the buildsystem.
  628. See the :manual:`cmake-packages(7)` manual for more on creating packages
  629. with :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` targets.
  630. .. _`Alias Targets`:
  631. Alias Targets
  632. -------------
  633. An ``ALIAS`` target is a name which may be used interchangably with
  634. a binary target name in read-only contexts. A primary use-case for ``ALIAS``
  635. targets is for example or unit test executables accompanying a library, which
  636. may be part of the same buildsystem or built separately based on user
  637. configuration.
  638. .. code-block:: cmake
  639. add_library(lib1 lib1.cpp)
  640. install(TARGETS lib1 EXPORT lib1Export ${dest_args})
  641. install(EXPORT lib1Export NAMESPACE Upstream:: ${other_args})
  642. add_library(Upstream::lib1 ALIAS lib1)
  643. In another directory, we can link unconditionally to the ``Upstream::lib1``
  644. target, which may be an :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target from a package, or an
  645. ``ALIAS`` target if built as part of the same buildsystem.
  646. .. code-block:: cmake
  647. if (NOT TARGET Upstream::lib1)
  648. find_package(lib1 REQUIRED)
  649. endif()
  650. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  651. target_link_libraries(exe1 Upstream::lib1)
  652. ``ALIAS`` targets are not mutable, installable or exportable. They are
  653. entirely local to the buildsystem description. A name can be tested for
  654. whether it is an ``ALIAS`` name by reading the :prop_tgt:`ALIASED_TARGET`
  655. property from it:
  656. .. code-block:: cmake
  657. get_target_property(_aliased Upstream::lib1 ALIASED_TARGET)
  658. if(_aliased)
  659. message(STATUS "The name Upstream::lib1 is an ALIAS for ${_aliased}.")
  660. endif()
  661. .. _`Interface Libraries`:
  662. Interface Libraries
  663. -------------------
  664. An ``INTERFACE`` target has no :prop_tgt:`LOCATION` and is mutable, but is
  665. otherwise similar to an :prop_tgt:`IMPORTED` target.
  666. It may specify usage requirements such as
  667. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES`,
  668. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_DEFINITIONS`,
  669. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_COMPILE_OPTIONS`,
  670. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES`,
  671. :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_SOURCES`,
  672. and :prop_tgt:`INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE`.
  673. Only the ``INTERFACE`` modes of the :command:`target_include_directories`,
  674. :command:`target_compile_definitions`, :command:`target_compile_options`,
  675. :command:`target_sources`, and :command:`target_link_libraries` commands
  676. may be used with ``INTERFACE`` libraries.
  677. A primary use-case for ``INTERFACE`` libraries is header-only libraries.
  678. .. code-block:: cmake
  679. add_library(Eigen INTERFACE)
  680. target_include_directories(Eigen INTERFACE
  681. $<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src>
  682. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include/Eigen>
  683. )
  684. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  685. target_link_libraries(exe1 Eigen)
  686. Here, the usage requirements from the ``Eigen`` target are consumed and used
  687. when compiling, but it has no effect on linking.
  688. Another use-case is to employ an entirely target-focussed design for usage
  689. requirements:
  690. .. code-block:: cmake
  691. add_library(pic_on INTERFACE)
  692. set_property(TARGET pic_on PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE ON)
  693. add_library(pic_off INTERFACE)
  694. set_property(TARGET pic_off PROPERTY INTERFACE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE OFF)
  695. add_library(enable_rtti INTERFACE)
  696. target_compile_options(enable_rtti INTERFACE
  697. $<$<OR:$<COMPILER_ID:GNU>,$<COMPILER_ID:Clang>>:-rtti>
  698. )
  699. add_executable(exe1 exe1.cpp)
  700. target_link_libraries(exe1 pic_on enable_rtti)
  701. This way, the build specification of ``exe1`` is expressed entirely as linked
  702. targets, and the complexity of compiler-specific flags is encapsulated in an
  703. ``INTERFACE`` library target.
  704. The properties permitted to be set on or read from an ``INTERFACE`` library
  705. are:
  706. * Properties matching ``INTERFACE_*``
  707. * Built-in properties matching ``COMPATIBLE_INTERFACE_*``
  708. * ``EXPORT_NAME``
  709. * ``IMPORTED``
  710. * ``NAME``
  711. * Properties matching ``MAP_IMPORTED_CONFIG_*``
  712. ``INTERFACE`` libraries may be installed and exported. Any content they refer
  713. to must be installed separately:
  714. .. code-block:: cmake
  715. add_library(Eigen INTERFACE)
  716. target_include_directories(Eigen INTERFACE
  717. $<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src>
  718. $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include/Eigen>
  719. )
  720. install(TARGETS Eigen EXPORT eigenExport)
  721. install(EXPORT eigenExport NAMESPACE Upstream::
  722. DESTINATION lib/cmake/Eigen
  723. )
  724. install(FILES
  725. ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/eigen.h
  726. ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/vector.h
  727. ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/matrix.h
  728. DESTINATION include/Eigen
  729. )