cmake(1) ******** Synopsis ======== :: cmake [options] cmake [options] Description =========== The "cmake" executable is the CMake command-line interface. It may be used to configure projects in scripts. Project configuration settings may be specified on the command line with the -D option. The -i option will cause cmake to interactively prompt for such settings. CMake is a cross-platform build system generator. Projects specify their build process with platform-independent CMake listfiles included in each directory of a source tree with the name CMakeLists.txt. Users build a project by using CMake to generate a build system for a native tool on their platform. .. include:: OPTIONS_BUILD.txt * ``-E``: CMake command mode. For true platform independence, CMake provides a list of commands that can be used on all systems. Run with -E help for the usage information. Commands available are: chdir, compare_files, copy, copy_directory, copy_if_different, echo, echo_append, environment, make_directory, md5sum, remove, remove_directory, rename, tar, time, touch, touch_nocreate. In addition, some platform specific commands are available. On Windows: delete_regv, write_regv. On UNIX: create_symlink. * ``-L[A][H]``: List non-advanced cached variables. List cache variables will run CMake and list all the variables from the CMake cache that are not marked as INTERNAL or ADVANCED. This will effectively display current CMake settings, which can then be changed with -D option. Changing some of the variables may result in more variables being created. If A is specified, then it will display also advanced variables. If H is specified, it will also display help for each variable. * ``--build ``: Build a CMake-generated project binary tree. This abstracts a native build tool's command-line interface with the following options: :: = Project binary directory to be built. --target = Build instead of default targets. --config = For multi-configuration tools, choose . --clean-first = Build target 'clean' first, then build. (To clean only, use --target 'clean'.) --use-stderr = Ignored. Behavior is default in CMake >= 3.0. -- = Pass remaining options to the native tool. Run cmake --build with no options for quick help. * ``-N``: View mode only. Only load the cache. Do not actually run configure and generate steps. * ``-P ``: Process script mode. Process the given cmake file as a script written in the CMake language. No configure or generate step is performed and the cache is not modified. If variables are defined using -D, this must be done before the -P argument. * ``--find-package``: Run in pkg-config like mode. Search a package using find_package() and print the resulting flags to stdout. This can be used to use cmake instead of pkg-config to find installed libraries in plain Makefile-based projects or in autoconf-based projects (via share/aclocal/cmake.m4). * ``--graphviz=[file]``: Generate graphviz of dependencies, see CMakeGraphVizOptions.cmake for more. Generate a graphviz input file that will contain all the library and executable dependencies in the project. See the documentation for CMakeGraphVizOptions.cmake for more details. * ``--system-information [file]``: Dump information about this system. Dump a wide range of information about the current system. If run from the top of a binary tree for a CMake project it will dump additional information such as the cache, log files etc. * ``--debug-trycompile``: Do not delete the try_compile build tree. Only useful on one try_compile at a time. Do not delete the files and directories created for try_compile calls. This is useful in debugging failed try_compiles. It may however change the results of the try-compiles as old junk from a previous try-compile may cause a different test to either pass or fail incorrectly. This option is best used for one try-compile at a time, and only when debugging. * ``--debug-output``: Put cmake in a debug mode. Print extra stuff during the cmake run like stack traces with message(send_error ) calls. * ``--trace``: Put cmake in trace mode. Print a trace of all calls made and from where with message(send_error ) calls. * ``--warn-uninitialized``: Warn about uninitialized values. Print a warning when an uninitialized variable is used. * ``--warn-unused-vars``: Warn about unused variables. Find variables that are declared or set, but not used. * ``--no-warn-unused-cli``: Don't warn about command line options. Don't find variables that are declared on the command line, but not used. * ``--check-system-vars``: Find problems with variable usage in system files. Normally, unused and uninitialized variables are searched for only in CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR and CMAKE_BINARY_DIR. This flag tells CMake to warn about other files as well. .. include:: OPTIONS_HELP.txt See Also ======== .. include:: LINKS.txt