[CMake] parsing config.h files and setting cmake variables accordingly

Michael Jackson mike.jackson at bluequartz.net
Fri Feb 13 08:04:01 EST 2009


That is the best way to do it. Have all the options in your CMake file  
and let the user select which options they want to compile with. Then  
"configure_file" to create your config.h file.


---
Mike Jackson                 www.bluequartz.net



On Feb 13, 2009, at 7:45 AM, Clemens Arth wrote:

> Hello,
>
> the config files were written some years ago simply to collect all  
> the possibilities how to compile the projects. Unfortunately this  
> was long before cmake came into play, thus the problem just came up  
> now because I wanted to set up a system for nightly builds.
>
> Well, I think the best solution might be to drop the old config.h  
> file and to replace it by a file for setting the variables in the  
> cmake environment, and finally to create a new config.h version with  
> cmake online with a call to configure_file. I think, this is, in  
> principal, the way you might have kept in mind when you suggested a  
> look at configure_file, right?
>
> Regards
> Clemens
>
> Pau Garcia i Quiles wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I see. So, where is that config.h created? In your CMake build- 
>> system?
>> is it from an external library? If the former, maybe you could use
>> variables (cmake -DWITH_OPENGL:BOOL=1 ... ); if the latter, I don't
>> know (the only thing I can come with at this moment to survive
>> additional spaces, etc are regular expressions).
>>
>> On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 1:10 PM, Clemens Arth <clemens.arth at gmx.at>  
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> thanks for the hint, but my problem is exactly the opposite of the  
>>> one
>>> configure_file is solving. I'm already using configure_file in  
>>> multiple
>>> places, but here I don't want to write config files, instead I  
>>> want to parse
>>> their content back to cmake, and that's why I don't think  
>>> configure_file.
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> Clemens
>>>
>>> Pau Garcia i Quiles wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello,
>>>>
>>>> Take a look at CONFIGURE_FILE
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 12:46 PM, Clemens Arth  
>>>> <clemens.arth at gmx.at>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> I've got a  question concerning  string processing in cmake. Our  
>>>>> software
>>>>> framework consists of multiple libraries and has many different  
>>>>> features
>>>>> to
>>>>> be enabled or disabled using #defines. For example, one option  
>>>>> is to
>>>>> compile
>>>>> with OpenGL or with OpenGL ES support. Thus in a config.h file,  
>>>>> one of
>>>>> two
>>>>> variables is valid to be #defined, USE_OPENGL or USE_OPENGLES.  
>>>>> Depending
>>>>> on
>>>>> the variable defined cmake should link against a specific set of
>>>>> libraries.
>>>>>
>>>>> Currently determining which feature is set works the following  
>>>>> way in my
>>>>> CMakeLists.txt:
>>>>>
>>>>> Code:
>>>>> # check for the configuration and set the corresponding GL/GLES  
>>>>> libraries
>>>>> accordingly
>>>>> FILE(READ ${LIB_SOURCE_DIR}/include/config.h CURRENT_CONFIG)
>>>>> STRING(REGEX MATCH "\#define USE_OPENGLES" GLES_IS_SET $ 
>>>>> {CURRENT_CONFIG})
>>>>> STRING(REGEX MATCH "\#define USE_OPENGL" GL_IS_SET $ 
>>>>> {CURRENT_CONFIG})
>>>>> IF("#define USE_OPENGLES" STREQUAL "${GLES_IS_SET}")
>>>>> MESSAGE("GLES config!")
>>>>> ELSE("#define USE_OPENGLES" STREQUAL "${GLES_IS_SET}")
>>>>> IF("#define USE_OPENGL" STREQUAL "${GL_IS_SET}")
>>>>>     MESSAGE("GL config!")
>>>>> ELSE("#define USE_OPENGL" STREQUAL "${GL_IS_SET}")
>>>>>     MESSAGE("Error! USE_GL or USE_GLES must be defined!")
>>>>> ENDIF("#define USE_OPENGL" STREQUAL "${GL_IS_SET}")
>>>>> ENDIF("#define USE_OPENGLES" STREQUAL "${GLES_IS_SET}")
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Note that this is really a bad hack. First, if GLES_IS_SET is set
>>>>> ,GL_IS_SET
>>>>> is also set automatically. Second, if by accident the string  
>>>>> does not
>>>>> exactly match the content (an additional <space>, or there is a  
>>>>> second
>>>>> variable, for example called USE_OPENGL_EXTRAS), everything gets  
>>>>> really
>>>>> weird or fails at all. Finally, a problem is that cmake does not  
>>>>> actually
>>>>> notice if I changed the config.h file, so there should be an  
>>>>> option to
>>>>> mark
>>>>> the configuration as dirty if the config.h file is altered -  
>>>>> this is a
>>>>> problem which must not necessarily be solved, but maybe there is  
>>>>> a simple
>>>>> solution to this.
>>>>>
>>>>> Can someone give me some tips how to improve my really ugly  
>>>>> solution?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks and best regards
>>>>> Clemens
>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>>
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>>>>>
>>>>> Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at:
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>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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