If one of the libraries (_DEBUG or _RELEASE) is not set, the value is
set to the value of the other one. FindQt4, from which the macro is
extracted, sets the values to XXX_LIBRARY_{DEBUG,RELEASE}-NOTFOUND
instead. In both cases the XXX_LIBRARY is correct, but using NOTFOUND
makes it easier to understand which one is missing.
Update Tests/CMakeOnly/SelectLibraryConfigurations with the new logic.
Ubuntu install the CUDA libraries into a location that is different
than the default location provided by the NVidia installer. So we
teach the FindCUDA package to also find the Ubuntu install location.
WiX provides a lot of functionality for installers that cannot be
supported (easily) in the default WIX.template.in file.
For most users, the default template should be fine. However if users
want to produce merge modules, include custom actions, etc, this new
option allows for a hook into how the wxs is produced.
If one installs MinGW using the Code::Blocks IDE installer it goes to a
path like "c:\Program Files\CodeBlocks\MinGW", not "c:\MinGW". Use the
CodeBlocks registry entry to get the location.
Signed-off-by: Jason Spiro <jasonspiro4@gmail.com>
In CMakeDetermineCompilerABI we use try_compile with the COPY_FILE
option to get a copy of the compiled binary used to detect the ABI
information. We already tolerate the case when compilation fails.
However, when compilation appears to succeed but does not produce the
expected executable the try_compile command immediately reports an error
because the COPY_FILE fails.
Tolerate COPY_FILE failure without stopping the overall configuration
process by using the try_compile COPY_FILE_ERROR option to capture the
error message. Log the full error to CMakeError.log and simply report
failure to detect the ABI as if compilation had failed.
Teach the RunCMake.Configure test to cover this case and verify that the
messages show up as expected both in stdout and in CMakeError.log.
The VS IDE sets the environment variable VS_UNICODE_OUTPUT when
executing build rules in order to tell MS tools to report output through
a back door instead of through stdout/stderr. Unset this variable so
that CMake can capture or properly redirect all output from processes it
runs even when running inside a VS IDE build environment.
This generalizes the special cases fixed by commit 80d045b0 (When
GetPrerequisites.cmake runs dumpbin while running inside the VS IDE...,
2008-05-01) and commit 44aff73d (ExternalProject: Avoid bleed-through
output when logging, 2011-01-06), so drop special handling of
VS_UNICODE_OUTPUT in those instances.
The command line string passed to javac can exceed the 8191-character
limit on Windows when there are a large number of files to compile.
To avoid this, the list of sources is written to a file which is then
passed to javac as an argfile. Spaces in paths are dealt with by
enclosing each file in quotes, and separating files with a newline.
The linker flags for setting the compatibility and current versions of
libraries on Darwin are set for the supported Fortran compilers.
Set CMAKE_Fortran_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY for the NAG Fortran compiler to
have no space after <SONAME_FLAG> so the NAG compiler can parse the
argument correctly.
SelectLibraryConfigurations module currently cache and mark as advanced
the variable ${basename}_LIBRARY.
${basename}_LIBRARY_RELEASE and ${basename}_LIBRARY_DEBUG are usually
cached, because they often come from find_library().
${basename}_LIBRARY on the other hand is always of type
"optimized;${${basename}_LIBRARY_RELEASE};debug;${${basename}_LIBRARY_DEBUG}"
or just "${basename}_LIBRARY_RELEASE" or "${basename}_LIBRARY_DEBUG" if
only one version of the library is not found, if both have the same
value, or if configuration types are not supported.
Caching and marking as advanced just ${basename}_LIBRARY_RELEASE and
${basename}_LIBRARY_DEBUG is enough, just by modifying these two
variables, the user has enough control on finding the library, and
having 3 variables is redundant and confusing.
We support multiple commands per external project step by using
the COMMAND keyword. Document this behavior and show an example.
While at it, document that shell operators and current working
directory behavior is not defined.
In CMakeTestFortranCompiler we build a test program using a Fortran 90
construct to check whether the compiler supports the language. Some
compilers have options to require explicit variable types. Fix the test
program to use an explicit variable type so it passes under such a
configuration.
Suggested-by: Neil Carlson <neil.n.carlson@gmail.com>
9a76d83 VS12: Find proper MSBuild for VSProjectInSubdir test
4e5cb39 Merge branch 'master' into vs12-generator
78fdbbc FindBoost: Add -vc120 mangling for VS 12
e99d7b1 VS12: Generate flag tables from MSBuild v120 tool files
77ac9b8 VS12: Add Visual Studio 12 generator (#14251)
Copy cmGlobalVisualStudio11Generator to cmGlobalVisualStudio12Generator
and update version numbers accordingly. Add the VS12 enumeration value.
Add module CMakeVS12FindMake to find MSBuild. Look for MSBuild in its
now-dedicated Windows Registry entry. Teach the platform module
Windows-MSVC to set MSVC12 and document the variable. Teach module
InstallRequiredSystemLibraries to look for the VS 12 runtime libraries.
Teach tests CheckCompilerRelatedVariables, Preprocess, VSExternalInclude,
and RunCMake.GeneratorToolset to treat VS 12 as they do VS 10 and 11.
Inspired-by: Minmin Gong <minmin.gong@gmail.com>
Leave other flags directly in the Makefile command lines and outside
any special inline response file syntax. Otherwise Borland does
not support flags with quotes in response files.
Refer users to the newer CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variables.
Use a more concise summary. Format the documentation to look
better in the "cmake --help-module" output.
When Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS is ON we may complain that Boost libraries
cannot be found even when shared libraries are present. Update the
error message to tell the user explicitly that we want static libraries.
Suggested-by: Laurence R. McGlashan <laurence.mcglashan@gmail.com>
Document the logic that parses for backward compatibility the old
variables that were used to control add_jar prior to named argument
support. In particular, document that the reason this logic exists is
for backward compatibility, and that new features do not need to add to
it.
This fixes#14210. In 2.8.10 CMakeDetermineCompiler.cmake was
modified (or added), and now the _INIT variable must not
be set to a list anymore, before it worked.
Alex
For clang, this allows passing -target <triple> to the compiler, and
for qcc, -V<arch> using toolchain files containing something like
set(triple arm-linux-gnueabihf)
set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER "/usr/bin/clang")
set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER_TARGET ${triple})
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER "/usr/bin/clang++")
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET ${triple})
or
set(arch gcc_ntoarmv7le)
set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER /opt/qnx650/host/linux/x86/usr/bin/qcc)
set(CMAKE_C_COMPILER_TARGET ${arch})
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER /opt/qnx650/host/linux/x86/usr/bin/QCC)
set(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET ${arch})
Both clang and qcc are inherently cross compiler( driver)s.
As CMAKE_ROOT_FIND_PATH can be a list, a new CMAKE_SYSROOT is
introduced, which is never a list.
The contents of this variable is passed to supporting compilers
as --sysroot. It is also accounted for when processing implicit
link directories reported by the compiler, and when generating
RPATH information.
dc1d025 OS X: Add test for rpaths on Mac.
8576b3f OS X: Add support for @rpath in export files.
00d71bd Xcode: Add rpath support in Xcode generator.
94e7fef OS X: Add RPATH support for Mac.
RPATH support is activated on targets that have the MACOSX_RPATH
property turned on.
For install time, it is also useful to set INSTALL_RPATH to help
find dependent libraries with an @rpath in their install name.
Also adding detection of rpath conflicts when using frameworks.
That will allow things like this:
find_package(Qt4)
qt4_generate_moc(myfile.h moc_myfile.cpp TARGET foo) # Note, foo target doesn't
# exist until below.
add_library(foo ...)
The qt4_generate_moc call would use the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES from
the foo target using generator expressions. Currently it reads
the INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES directory property, meaning that include_directories()
is required.
Support for the TARGET is also added to qt4_wrap_cpp, but not qt4_automoc,
as that is deprecated in favor of the AUTOMOC target property.
The moc tool reports failure if the Q_INTERFACES macro is used with
an argument which has not appeared with Q_DECLARE_INTERFACE, so that is
the basis of the unit test.
The command line arguments are now always written to a file, which is
passed to moc as the @atfile. This was already the case on Windows, but
now it is used everywhere. The reason for that is that it is not currently
possible to expand the list of includes from a target directly in
a add_custom_command invokation (though that may become possible in the
future). There is not a big disadvantage to using the file anyway on
unix, so having one code path instead of two is also a motivation.
This corresponds to the g++ and clang++
option -fvisibility-inlines-hidden on linux. On Windows with MinGW,
this corresponds to -fno-keep-inline-dllexport. That option is
not supported by clang currently.
This is initialized by CMAKE_<LANG>_VISIBILITY_PRESET. The target
property is used as the operand to the -fvisibility= compile option
with GNU compilers and clang.
In commit 5b9149e0 (FindBoost: Overhaul caching and search repeat
behavior, 2012-09-24) we refactored the internal library search to use a
_Boost_FIND_LIBRARY macro to wrap around find_library calls. However,
CMake macros re-process escape sequences when evaluating calls inside
the macro after substituting placeholders (a historical bug). In order
to avoid escape sequences, convert backslashes to forward slashes before
passing arguments to the _Boost_FIND_LIBRARY macro.
The line
set( ${basename}_LIBRARY )
removes the normal variable, but if the corresponding cached variable is
present then line
list( APPEND ${basename}_LIBRARY optimized "${_libname}" )
uses that and fails. Replace the original line with
set( ${basename}_LIBRARY "" )
to set the normal variable to empty instead of unsetting it.
In Qt 5.1, Qt5::Core has a INTERFACE_QT_MAJOR_VERSION property
of '5', and since CMake 2.8.11, Qt4::QtCore has an
INTERFACE_QT_MAJOR_VERSION of '4'. This was introduced in
commit 4aa10cd6 (FindQt4: Set the INTERFACE_QT_MAJOR_VERSION for
Qt4::QtCore, 2013-03-16), to produce an error if Qt 4 and Qt 5
are erroneously used by the same target. This can also be used
however to determine the Qt major version, and therefore the
particular moc executable to use during automoc steps. This means
that targets in a single buildsystem can use a selection of Qt 4
and Qt 5, and still take advantage of the CMAKE_AUTOMOC feature
without conflicting.
The ExternalData_LINK_CONTENT option tells ExternalData to convert real
data files it finds into content links and to "stage" the original
content in a ".ExternalData_<algo>_<hash>" file. However, after a data
object has been staged it is possible that a user-provided pattern in
the "REGEX:" option will later match the staged object file. We must
not process staged object files even when a user pattern matches them.
Fix the implementation to not match a staged object file as a normal
data file for conversion. Extend the RunCMake.ExternalData test to
cover this case.
Modify FindProtobuf.cmake to find the pthread library on UNIX platforms,
and to add the same to PROTOBUF_LIBRARIES, as this is a link dependency
of libraries using the protobuf headers.
The variables in this module are used to configure a header file
with defines whose name depends on the name of the target.
As valid names of targets may be invalid for use as defines, convert
the names of the defines used to C identifiers first. This is already
done in C++ code for the DEFINE_SYMBOL property.
This is not as simple as ensuring that the BASE_NAME is a C identifier,
because most of the define names are configurable, and because use of
a BASE_NAME which is not a C identifier, such as 4square can become a
C identifier by specifying a prefix in the generate_export_header
macro.
The significant issue with MODULEs is that on Windows, the exported
symbols must be dllexported and they are not imported.
In other export macro implementations this is done by defining an
export macro outside of any ifdef which depends on definitions set
on the command line. However, with cmake we already expect the
DEFINE_SYMBOL to be defined, so the regular EXPORT macro can be
used by such plugins.
Teach CMakeParseImplicitLinkInfo to convert the CMAKE_LINKER file name
to a regular expression that matches only the original name. Escape
special characters like '+' so they are not treated as regex syntax.
Extend the ImplicitLinkInfoTest to test handling of a CMAKE_LINKER value
with many special characters.