CMake:How To Find Installed Software: Difference between revisions

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If your software uses external libraries (i.e. libraries not coming with your software), you don't know in advance where its headers and libraries will be located on the system where your software will be compiled.
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Depending on the location appropriate include directories and library search paths will have to be added to the compile commands.


CMake helps you with this by providing so-called modules. Let's say you want to use the PNG-Library, here's how you would do this with cmake:
This page has moved [https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/community/wikis/doc/tutorials/How-To-Find-Installed-Software here].
<pre>
FIND_PACKAGE(PNG)
 
IF(PNG_FOUND)
  INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES(${PNG_INCLUDE_DIR})
 
  ADD_EXECUTABLE(imageviewer main.c image.c)
  TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(imageviewer ${PNG_LIBRARY})
 
ENDIF(PNG_FOUND)
</pre>
 
Every module is provided in the form Find<name>.cmake, they are located in the CMake module directory, on UNIX usualy <tt>/usr/local/share/CMake/Modules/ </tt> It is then used in the CMakeLists.txt with the FIND_PACKAGE(<name>) command. For details see the regular CMake documentation.
Every module will define the following variables:
* <name>_FOUND
* <name>_INCLUDE_DIR or <name>_INCLUDES
* <name>_LIBRARY or <name>_LIBRARIES
 
As you can see, with PNG_FOUND you can test whether the package you need has actually been found. If that's the case, you have to add the include directories and link to the libraries which make up the package, in this case PNG_INCLUDE_DIR and PNG_LIBRARIES.
 
If the package is not optional but your software can't be built at all without the package, you should use the REQUIRED argument for FIND_PACKAGE(). This will have the effect that cmake will abort with an error if it can't find the software.
 
== What to do if cmake doesn't find the package although it exists on the system ? ==
 
Let's say the PNG library hasn't been found. If that's the case, cmake apparently didn't look good enough :-)
There are several things you can do about this.
The simple method, which invloves quite a lot of manual work, is to just tell cmake explictely where the software is located. To do this, you have three options:
* edit the file CMakeCache.txt and search for the entries named PNG_INCLUDE_DIR and PNG_LIBRARY. They will be set to NOTFOUND. Edit these entries and enter the correct path to the PNG include directory on your system, e.g. c:stuff/png/include/ and do the same for PNG_LIBRARY: c:/stuff/png/png.dll .Then save the file and run cmake again
* you can use the cmake GUIs ccmake or CMakeSetup to enter these options. This is basically the same as the point above, but with a GUI.
* you can tell cmake the correct values via the command line: cmake -DPNG_INCLUDE_DIR=c:/stuff/png/include -DPNG_LIBRARY=c:/stuff/png/png.dll
 
There are also two environment variables which you can set to help cmake find the package. These are the variables CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH and CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH. You can set these to the directories where the additional headers and libraries are located and then cmake will find them if they are really there.
 
== How to write a FindSomething.cmake module ==
 
 
 
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Latest revision as of 15:40, 30 April 2018


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