[CMake] CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR on a function

Petr Kmoch petr.kmoch at gmail.com
Tue Oct 25 01:20:34 EDT 2016


Hi Tiago.

Yes, Craig's original comment applies. Targets do not have scope, variables
do. Because you're in a function, you'd need to set the variable using
PARENT_SCOPE to have it apply outside the function:

function(AddTest)
  #...
  set(CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR ON PARENT_SCOPE)
  #...
endfunction()

Note that this will only help if the funciton is called directly; if called
from another function, it will fail again (since the variable would just be
set in the calling function's scope and not at global level).

However, taking a step back, I believe setting the variable doesn't belong
into the `AddTest` function at all. Looking at it, it seems to be concerned
with creating and setting up one target. IMO, such a function should not
also modify global state. Do not forget that CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR is
not target-specific in any way; it affects *all* targets in the current
directory.

Therefore, my suggestion would be to move setting it out of the function
altogether and perform it at CMakeList scope. Alternatively, put the
function's declaration into a separate CMake file, along with the set()
command. Then, whoever wants to use the function has to include() that
file, which will also cause them to have CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR set
accordingly.

Petr

On 25 October 2016 at 00:55, Tiago Macarios <tiagomacarios at gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Craig,
>
> Maybe my problem description was lacking. Below is the function I have.
> Both CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR and the target are defined on the same
> function scope, but this does not seem to work. I need to define
> CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR on the parent CMakeLists file.
>
> function(AddTest)
>     set(options)
>     set(oneValueArgs FILE FOLDER)
>     set(multiValueArgs LIBRARIES)
>     cmake_parse_arguments(TEST
>         "${options}"
>         "${oneValueArgs}"
>         "${multiValueArgs}"
>         ${ARGN}
>     )
>
>     # THIS DOES NOT WORK HERE I NEED TO SET IT IN THE PARENT FOLDER
>     set(CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR ON)
>
>     get_filename_component(FILE_RAW ${TEST_FILE} NAME_WE)
>     add_executable(${FILE_RAW} ${TEST_FILE})
>
>     set_target_properties(${FILE_RAW}
>         PROPERTIES
>         CXX_STANDARD 14
>         CXX_EXTENSIONS OFF
>         AUTOMOC ON
>         AUTOUIC ON
>         FOLDER ${TEST_FOLDER}
>     )
>
>     find_package(Qt5Test)
>     target_link_libraries(${FILE_RAW} ${TEST_LIBRARIES})
>
>     add_test(NAME ${FILE_RAW} COMMAND ${FILE_RAW})
> endfunction()
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 3:48 PM, Craig Scott <craig.scott at crascit.com>
> wrote:
>
>> function() introduces a new scope, so if you want changes you make to
>> variables inside the function to be visible outside the function, you need
>> to use set(... PARENT_SCOPE). Alternatively, a macro() does not introduce a
>> new scope, so replacing your function() with a macro() may also yield the
>> behaviour you want (but changing to a macro has other effects, so make sure
>> you read the docs before going down that path). Also note that setting it
>> in one directory does not make it apply to subdirectories as well, in case
>> that matters in your situation.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 25, 2016 at 9:42 AM, Tiago Macarios <tiagomacarios at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Does CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR need to be set outside of a function?
>>>
>>> I have a function where I define an executable "add_executable". This
>>> executable uses moc'ed Qt clasees, so I need to set
>>> CMAKE_INCLUDE_CURRENT_DIR. It seems like I have to set it from the top
>>> level script calling the function. If I set it inside the function the
>>> compilation fails with a missing moc file.
>>>
>>> Any ideas?
>>>
>>> Tiago
>>>
>>> --
>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Craig Scott
>> Melbourne, Australia
>> https://crascit.com
>>
>
>
> --
>
> Powered by www.kitware.com
>
> Please keep messages on-topic and check the CMake FAQ at:
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>
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> information on each offering, please visit:
>
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