NAME
cmakemodules - Reference of available CMake modules.
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.
MODULES
The following modules are provided with CMake. They can be used with
INCLUDE(ModuleName).
CMake Modules - Modules coming with CMake, the Cross-Platform Makefile Generator.
This is the documentation for the modules and scripts coming with
CMake. Using these modules you can check the computer system for
installed software packages, features of the compiler and the existance
of headers to name just a few.
AddFileDependencies
ADD_FILE_DEPENDENCIES(source_file depend_files...)
Adds the given files as dependencies to source_file
BundleUtilities
BundleUtilities.cmake
A collection of CMake utility functions useful for dealing with
.app bundles on the Mac and bundle-like directories on any OS.
The following functions are provided by this script:
get_bundle_main_executable
get_dotapp_dir
get_bundle_and_executable
get_bundle_all_executables
get_item_key
clear_bundle_keys
set_bundle_key_values
get_bundle_keys
copy_resolved_item_into_bundle
fixup_bundle_item
fixup_bundle
copy_and_fixup_bundle
verify_bundle_prerequisites
verify_bundle_symlinks
verify_app
Requires CMake 2.6 or greater because it uses function, break
and PARENT_SCOPE. Also depends on GetPrerequisites.cmake.
CMakeBackwardCompatibilityCXX
define a bunch of backwards compatibility variables
CMAKE_ANSI_CXXFLAGS - flag for ansi c++
CMAKE_HAS_ANSI_STRING_STREAM - has <strstream>
INCLUDE(TestForANSIStreamHeaders)
INCLUDE(CheckIncludeFileCXX)
INCLUDE(TestForSTDNamespace)
INCLUDE(TestForANSIForScope)
CMakeDependentOption
Macro to provide an option dependent on other options.
This macro presents an option to the user only if a set of other
conditions are true. When the option is not presented a default
value is used, but any value set by the user is preserved for
when the option is presented again. Example invocation:
CMAKE_DEPENDENT_OPTION(USE_FOO "Use Foo" ON
"USE_BAR;NOT USE_ZOT" OFF)
If USE_BAR is true and USE_ZOT is false, this provides an option
called USE_FOO that defaults to ON. Otherwise, it sets USE_FOO
to OFF. If the status of USE_BAR or USE_ZOT ever changes, any
value for the USE_FOO option is saved so that when the option is
re-enabled it retains its old value.
CMakeDetermineVSServicePack
Includes a public function for assisting users in trying to
determine the
Visual Studio service pack in use.
Sets the passed in variable to one of the following values or an
empty string if unknown.
vc80
vc80sp1
vc90
vc90sp1
Usage: ===========================
if(MSVC)
include(CMakeDetermineVSServicePack)
DetermineVSServicePack( my_service_pack )
if( my_service_pack )
message(STATUS "Detected: ${my_service_pack}")
endif()
endif()
===========================
CMakeFindFrameworks
helper module to find OSX frameworks
CMakeForceCompiler
This module defines macros intended for use by cross-compiling
toolchain files when CMake is not able to automatically detect
the compiler identification.
Macro CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER has the following signature:
CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)
It sets CMAKE_C_COMPILER to the given compiler and the cmake
internal variable CMAKE_C_COMPILER_ID to the given compiler-id.
It also bypasses the check for working compiler and basic
compiler information tests.
Macro CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER has the following signature:
CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)
It sets CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER to the given compiler and the cmake
internal variable CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID to the given
compiler-id. It also bypasses the check for working compiler and
basic compiler information tests.
Macro CMAKE_FORCE_Fortran_COMPILER has the following signature:
CMAKE_FORCE_Fortran_COMPILER(<compiler> <compiler-id>)
It sets CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER to the given compiler and the
cmake internal variable CMAKE_Fortran_COMPILER_ID to the given
compiler-id. It also bypasses the check for working compiler and
basic compiler information tests.
So a simple toolchain file could look like this:
INCLUDE (CMakeForceCompiler)
SET(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME Generic)
CMAKE_FORCE_C_COMPILER (chc12 MetrowerksHicross)
CMAKE_FORCE_CXX_COMPILER (chc12 MetrowerksHicross)
CMakePrintSystemInformation
print system information
This file can be used for diagnostic purposes just include it in
a project to see various internal CMake variables.
CMakeVerifyManifest
CMakeVerifyManifest.cmake
This script is used to verify that embeded manifests and side by
side manifests for a project match. To run this script, cd to a
directory and run the script with cmake -P. On the command line
you can pass in versions that are OK even if not found in the
.manifest files. For example, cmake
-Dallow_versions=8.0.50608.0 -PCmakeVerifyManifest.cmake could
be used to allow an embeded manifest of 8.0.50608.0 to be used
in a project even if that version was not found in the .manifest
file.
CPack Build binary and source package installers
The CPack module generates binary and source installers in a
variety of formats using the cpack program. Inclusion of the
CPack module adds two new targets to the resulting makefiles,
package and package_source, which build the binary and source
installers, respectively. The generated binary installers
contain everything installed via CMake’s INSTALL command (and
the deprecated INSTALL_FILES, INSTALL_PROGRAMS, and
INSTALL_TARGETS commands).
For certain kinds of binary installers (including the graphical
installers on Mac OS X and Windows), CPack generates installers
that allow users to select individual application components to
install. The contents of each of the components are identified
by the COMPONENT argument of CMake’s INSTALL command. These
components can be annotated with user-friendly names and
descriptions, inter-component dependencies, etc., and grouped in
various ways to customize the resulting installer. See the
cpack_add_* commands, described below, for more information
about component-specific installations.
Before including the CPack module, there are a variety of
variables that can be set to customize the resulting installers.
The most commonly-used variables are:
CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME - The name of the package (or application). If
not specified, defaults to the project name.
CPACK_PACKAGE_VENDOR - The name of the package vendor (e.g.,
"Kitware").
CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MAJOR - Package major Version
CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR - Package minor Version
CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH - Package patch Version
CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_FILE - A text file used to describe the
project. Used, for example, the introduction screen of a
CPack-generated Windows installer to describe the project.
CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_SUMMARY - Short description of the
project (only a few words).
CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME - The name of the package file to generate,
not including the extension. For example, cmake-2.6.1-Linux-i686.
CPACK_PACKAGE_INSTALL_DIRECTORY - Installation directory on the
target system, e.g., "CMake 2.5".
CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_LICENSE - License file for the project, which
will typically be displayed to the user (often with an explicit
"Accept" button, for graphical installers) prior to installation.
CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_README - ReadMe file for the project, which
typically describes in some detail
CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_WELCOME - Welcome file for the project, which
welcomes users to this installer. Typically used in the graphical
installers on Windows and Mac OS X.
CPACK_MONOLITHIC_INSTALL - Disables the component-based
installation mechanism, so that all components are always installed.
CPACK_GENERATOR - List of CPack generators to use. If not
specified, CPack will create a set of options (e.g.,
CPACK_BINARY_NSIS) allowing the user to enable/disable individual
generators.
CPACK_OUTPUT_CONFIG_FILE - The name of the CPack configuration file
for binary installers that will be generated by the CPack
module. Defaults to CPackConfig.cmake.
CPACK_PACKAGE_EXECUTABLES - Lists each of the executables along
with a text label, to be used to create Start Menu shortcuts on
Windows. For example, setting this to the list ccmake;CMake will
create a shortcut named "CMake" that will execute the installed
executable ccmake.
CPACK_STRIP_FILES - List of files to be stripped. Starting with
CMake 2.6.0 CPACK_STRIP_FILES will be a boolean variable which
enables stripping of all files (a list of files evaluates to TRUE
in CMake, so this change is compatible).
The following CPack variables are specific to source packages,
and will not affect binary packages:
CPACK_SOURCE_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME - The name of the source package,
e.g., cmake-2.6.1
CPACK_SOURCE_STRIP_FILES - List of files in the source tree that
will be stripped. Starting with CMake 2.6.0
CPACK_SOURCE_STRIP_FILES will be a boolean variable which enables
stripping of all files (a list of files evaluates to TRUE in CMake,
so this change is compatible).
CPACK_SOURCE_GENERATOR - List of generators used for the source
packages. As with CPACK_GENERATOR, if this is not specified then
CPack will create a set of options (e.g., CPACK_SOURCE_ZIP)
allowing users to select which packages will be generated.
CPACK_SOURCE_OUTPUT_CONFIG_FILE - The name of the CPack
configuration file for source installers that will be generated by
the CPack module. Defaults to CPackSourceConfig.cmake.
CPACK_SOURCE_IGNORE_FILES - Pattern of files in the source tree
that won’t be packaged when building a source package. This is a
list of patterns, e.g., /CVS/;/\\.svn/;\\.swp$;\\.#;/#;.*~;cscope.*
The following variables are specific to the DragNDrop installers
built on Mac OS X:
CPACK_DMG_VOLUME_NAME - The volume name of the generated disk
image. Defaults to CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME.
CPACK_DMG_FORMAT - The disk image format. Common values are UDRO
(UDIF read-only), UDZO (UDIF zlib-compressed) or UDBZ (UDIF
bzip2-compressed). Refer to hdiutil(1) for more information on
other available formats.
CPACK_DMG_DS_STORE - Path to a custom .DS_Store file which e.g.
can be used to specify the Finder window position/geometry and
layout (such as hidden toolbars, placement of the icons etc.).
This file has to be generated by the Finder (either manually or
through OSA-script) using a normal folder from which the .DS_Store
file can then be extracted.
CPACK_DMG_BACKGROUND_IMAGE - Path to an image file which is to be
used as the background for the Finder Window when the disk image
is opened. By default no background image is set. The background
image is applied after applying the custom .DS_Store file.
CPACK_COMMAND_HDIUTIL - Path to the hdiutil(1) command used to
operate on disk image files on Mac OS X. This variable can be used
to override the automatically detected command (or specify its
location if the auto-detection fails to find it.)
CPACK_COMMAND_SETFILE - Path to the SetFile(1) command used to set
extended attributes on files and directories on Mac OS X. This
variable can be used to override the automatically detected
command (or specify its location if the auto-detection fails to
find it.)
CPACK_COMMAND_REZ - Path to the Rez(1) command used to compile
resources on Mac OS X. This variable can be used to override the
automatically detected command (or specify its location if the
auto-detection fails to find it.)
Installers built on Mac OS X using the Bundle generator use the
aforementioned DragNDrop variables, plus the following
Bundle-specific parameters:
CPACK_BUNDLE_NAME - The name of the generated bundle. This
appears in the OSX finder as the bundle name. Required.
CPACK_BUNDLE_PLIST - Path to an OSX plist file that will be used
as the Info.plist for the generated bundle. This assumes that
the caller has generated or specified their own Info.plist file.
Required.
CPACK_BUNDLE_ICON - Path to an OSX icns file that will be used as
the icon for the generated bundle. This is the icon that appears
in the OSX finder for the bundle, and in the OSX dock when the
bundle is opened. Required.
CPACK_BUNDLE_STARTUP_SCRIPT - Path to an executable or script that
will be run whenever an end-user double-clicks the generated bundle
in the OSX Finder. Optional.
The following variables are specific to the graphical installers
built on Windows using the Nullsoft Installation System.
CPACK_PACKAGE_INSTALL_REGISTRY_KEY - Registry key used when
installing this project.
CPACK_NSIS_MUI_ICON - The icon file (.ico) for the generated
install program.
CPACK_NSIS_MUI_UNIICON - The icon file (.ico) for the generated
uninstall program.
CPACK_PACKAGE_ICON - A branding image that will be displayed inside
the installer.
CPACK_NSIS_EXTRA_INSTALL_COMMANDS - Extra NSIS commands that will
be added to the install Section.
CPACK_NSIS_EXTRA_UNINSTALL_COMMANDS - Extra NSIS commands that will
be added to the uninstall Section.
CPACK_NSIS_COMPRESSOR - The arguments that will be passed to the
NSIS SetCompressor command.
CPACK_NSIS_MODIFY_PATH - If this is set to "ON", then an extra page
will appear in the installer that will allow the user to choose
whether the program directory should be added to the system PATH
variable.
CPACK_NSIS_DISPLAY_NAME - The display name string that appears in
the Windows Add/Remove Program control panel
CPACK_NSIS_PACKAGE_NAME - The title displayed at the top of the
installer.
CPACK_NSIS_INSTALLED_ICON_NAME - A path to the executable that
contains the installer icon.
CPACK_NSIS_HELP_LINK - URL to a web site providing assistance in
installing your application.
CPACK_NSIS_URL_INFO_ABOUT - URL to a web site providing more
information about your application.
CPACK_NSIS_CONTACT - Contact information for questions and comments
about the installation process.
CPACK_NSIS_CREATE_ICONS_EXTRA - Additional NSIS commands for
creating start menu shortcuts.
CPACK_NSIS_DELETE_ICONS_EXTRA -Additional NSIS commands to
uninstall start menu shortcuts.
The following variable is specific to installers build on Mac OS
X using PackageMaker:
CPACK_OSX_PACKAGE_VERSION - The version of Mac OS X that the
resulting PackageMaker archive should be compatible
with. Different versions of Mac OS X support different
features. For example, CPack can only build component-based
installers for Mac OS X 10.4 or newer, and can only build
installers that download component son-the-fly for Mac OS X 10.5
or newer. If left blank, this value will be set to the minimum
version of Mac OS X that supports the requested features. Set this
variable to some value (e.g., 10.4) only if you want to guarantee
that your installer will work on that version of Mac OS X, and
don’t mind missing extra features available in the installer
shipping with later versions of Mac OS X.
The following variables are for advanced uses of CPack:
CPACK_CMAKE_GENERATOR - What CMake generator should be used if the
project is CMake project. Defaults to the value of CMAKE_GENERATOR;
few users will want to change this setting.
CPACK_INSTALL_CMAKE_PROJECTS - List of four values that specify
what project to install. The four values are: Build directory,
Project Name, Project Component, Directory. If omitted, CPack will
build an installer that installers everything.
CPACK_SYSTEM_NAME - System name, defaults to the value of
${CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME}.
CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION - Package full version, used internally. By
default, this is built from CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MAJOR,
CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_MINOR, and CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION_PATCH.
CPACK_TOPLEVEL_TAG - Directory for the installed files.
CPACK_INSTALL_COMMANDS - Extra commands to install components.
CPACK_INSTALL_DIRECTORIES - Extra directories to install.
Component-specific installation allows users to select specific
sets of components to install during the install process.
Installation components are identified by the COMPONENT argument
of CMake’s INSTALL commands, and should be further described by
the following CPack commands:
cpack_add_component - Describes a CPack installation component
named by the COMPONENT argument to a CMake INSTALL command.
cpack_add_component(compname
[DISPLAY_NAME name]
[DESCRIPTION description]
[HIDDEN | REQUIRED | DISABLED ]
[GROUP group]
[DEPENDS comp1 comp2 ... ]
[INSTALL_TYPES type1 type2 ... ]
[DOWNLOADED]
[ARCHIVE_FILE filename])
The cmake_add_component command describes an installation
component, which the user can opt to install or remove as part of
the graphical installation process. compname is the name of the
component, as provided to the COMPONENT argument of one or more
CMake INSTALL commands.
DISPLAY_NAME is the displayed name of the component, used in
graphical installers to display the component name. This value can
be any string.
DESCRIPTION is an extended description of the component, used in
graphical installers to give the user additional information about
the component. Descriptions can span multiple lines using "\n" as
the line separator. Typically, these descriptions should be no
more than a few lines long.
HIDDEN indicates that this component will be hidden in the
graphical installer, so that the user cannot directly change
whether it is installed or not.
REQUIRED indicates that this component is required, and therefore
will always be installed. It will be visible in the graphical
installer, but it cannot be unselected. (Typically, required
components are shown greyed out).
DISABLED indicates that this component should be disabled
(unselected) by default. The user is free to select this component
for installation, unless it is also HIDDEN.
DEPENDS lists the components on which this component depends. If
this component is selected, then each of the components listed
must also be selected. The dependency information is encoded
within the installer itself, so that users cannot install
inconsitent sets of components.
GROUP names the component group of which this component is a
part. If not provided, the component will be a standalone
component, not part of any component group. Component groups are
described with the cpack_add_component_group command, detailed
below.
INSTALL_TYPES lists the installation types of which this component
is a part. When one of these installations types is selected, this
component will automatically be selected. Installation types are
described with the cpack_add_install_type command, detailed below.
DOWNLOADED indicates that this component should be downloaded
on-the-fly by the installer, rather than packaged in with the
installer itself. For more information, see the cpack_configure_downloads
command.
ARCHIVE_FILE provides a name for the archive file created by CPack
to be used for downloaded components. If not supplied, CPack will
create a file with some name based on CPACK_PACKAGE_FILE_NAME and
the name of the component. See cpack_configure_downloads for more
information.
cpack_add_component_group - Describes a group of related CPack
installation components.
cpack_add_component_group(groupname
[DISPLAY_NAME name]
[DESCRIPTION description]
[PARENT_GROUP parent]
[EXPANDED]
[BOLD_TITLE])
The cpack_add_component_group describes a group of installation
components, which will be placed together within the listing of
options. Typically, component groups allow the user to
select/deselect all of the components within a single group via a
single group-level option. Use component groups to reduce the
complexity of installers with many options. groupname is an
arbitrary name used to identify the group in the GROUP argument of
the cpack_add_component command, which is used to place a
component in a group. The name of the group must not conflict with
the name of any component.
DISPLAY_NAME is the displayed name of the component group, used in
graphical installers to display the component group name. This
value can be any string.
DESCRIPTION is an extended description of the component group,
used in graphical installers to give the user additional
information about the components within that group. Descriptions
can span multiple lines using "\n" as the line
separator. Typically, these descriptions should be no more than a
few lines long.
PARENT_GROUP, if supplied, names the parent group of this group.
Parent groups are used to establish a hierarchy of groups,
providing an arbitrary hierarchy of groups.
EXPANDED indicates that, by default, the group should show up as
"expanded", so that the user immediately sees all of the
components within the group. Otherwise, the group will initially
show up as a single entry.
BOLD_TITLE indicates that the group title should appear in bold,
to call the user’s attention to the group.
cpack_add_install_type - Add a new installation type containing a
set of predefined component selections to the graphical installer.
cpack_add_install_type(typename
[DISPLAY_NAME name])
The cpack_add_install_type command identifies a set of preselected
components that represents a common use case for an
application. For example, a "Developer" install type might include
an application along with its header and library files, while an
"End user" install type might just include the application’s
executable. Each component identifies itself with one or more
install types via the INSTALL_TYPES argument to
cpack_add_component.
DISPLAY_NAME is the displayed name of the install type, which will
typically show up in a drop-down box within a graphical
installer. This value can be any string.
cpack_configure_downloads - Configure CPack to download selected
components on-the-fly as part of the installation process.
cpack_configure_downloads(site
[UPLOAD_DIRECTORY dirname]
[ALL]
[ADD_REMOVE|NO_ADD_REMOVE])
The cpack_configure_downloads command configures installation-time
downloads of selected components. For each downloadable component,
CPack will create an archive containing the contents of that
component, which should be uploaded to the given site. When the
user selects that component for installation, the installer will
download and extract the component in place. This feature is
useful for creating small installers that only download the
requested components, saving bandwidth. Additionally, the
installers are small enough that they will be installed as part of
the normal installation process, and the "Change" button in
Windows Add/Remove Programs control panel will allow one to add or
remove parts of the application after the original
installation. On Windows, the downloaded-components functionality
requires the ZipDLL plug-in for NSIS, available at:
http://nsis.sourceforge.net/ZipDLL_plug-in
On Mac OS X, installers that download components on-the-fly can
only be built and installed on system using Mac OS X 10.5 or
later.
The site argument is a URL where the archives for downloadable
components will reside, e.g., http://www.cmake.org/files/2.6.1/installer/
All of the archives produced by CPack should be uploaded to that location.
UPLOAD_DIRECTORY is the local directory where CPack will create the
various archives for each of the components. The contents of this
directory should be uploaded to a location accessible by the URL given
in the site argument. If omitted, CPack will use the directory
CPackUploads inside the CMake binary directory to store the generated
archives.
The ALL flag indicates that all components be downloaded. Otherwise, only
those components explicitly marked as DOWNLOADED or that have a specified
ARCHIVE_FILE will be downloaded. Additionally, the ALL option implies
ADD_REMOVE (unless NO_ADD_REMOVE is specified).
ADD_REMOVE indicates that CPack should install a copy of the installer
that can be called from Windows’ Add/Remove Programs dialog (via the
"Modify" button) to change the set of installed components. NO_ADD_REMOVE
turns off this behavior. This option is ignored on Mac OS X.
CPackDeb
The builtin (binary) CPack Deb generator (Unix only)
CPackDeb may be used to create Deb package using CPack. CPackDeb
is a CPack generator thus it uses the CPACK_XXX variables used
by CPack : http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake:CPackConfiguration
However CPackRPM has specific features which are controlled by
the specifics CPACK_RPM_XXX variables.You’ll find a detailed
usage on the wiki:
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake:CPackPackageGenerators#DEB_.28UNIX_only.29
However as a handy reminder here comes the list of specific
variables:
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_NAME
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME (lower case)
The debian package summary
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_VERSION
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION
The debian package version
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_ARCHITECTURE)
Mandatory : YES
Default : Output of dpkg --print-architecture or i386
The debian package architecture
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_DEPENDS
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to set deb dependencies.
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_MAINTAINER
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_CONTACT
The debian package maintainer
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_SUMMARY
The debian package description
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_SECTION
Mandatory : YES
Default : ’devel’
The debian package section
CPACK_DEBIAN_PACKAGE_PRIORITY
Mandatory : YES
Default : ’optional’
The debian package priority
CPackRPM
The builtin (binary) CPack RPM generator (Unix only)
CPackRPM may be used to create RPM package using CPack. CPackRPM
is a CPack generator thus it uses the CPACK_XXX variables used
by CPack : http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake:CPackConfiguration
However CPackRPM has specific features which are controlled by
the specifics CPACK_RPM_XXX variables. You’ll find a detailed
usage on the wiki:
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake:CPackPackageGenerators#RPM_.28Unix_Only.29
However as a handy reminder here comes the list of specific
variables:
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_SUMMARY
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION
The RPM package summary
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_NAME
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_NAME
The RPM package name
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_VERSION
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_VERSION
The RPM package version
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_ARCHITECTURE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
The RPM package architecture. This may be set to "noarch" if you
know you are building a noarch package.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_RELEASE
Mandatory : YES
Default : 1
The RPM package release. This is the numbering of the RPM package
itself, i.e. the version of the packaging and not the version of the
content (see CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_VERSION). One may change the default
value if the previous packaging was buggy and/or you want to put here
a fancy Linux distro specific numbering.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_LICENSE
Mandatory : YES
Default : "unknown"
The RPM package license policy.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_GROUP
Mandatory : YES
Default : "unknown"
The RPM package group.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_VENDOR
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_VENDOR if set or "unknown"
The RPM package group.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION
Mandatory : YES
Default : CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_FILE if set or "no package description available"
CPACK_RPM_COMPRESSION_TYPE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to override RPM compression type to be used
to build the RPM. For example some Linux distribution now default
to lzma or xz compression whereas older cannot use such RPM.
Using this one can enforce compression type to be used.
Possible value are: lzma, xz, bzip2 and gzip.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_REQUIRES
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to set RPM dependencies (requires).
Note that you must enclose the complete requires string between quotes,
for example:
set(CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_REQUIRES "python >= 2.5.0, cmake >= 2.8")
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGES_PROVIDES
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to set RPM dependencies (provides).
CPACK_RPM_SPEC_INSTALL_POST
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to set an RPM post-install command inside the spec file.
For example setting it to "/bin/true" may be used to prevent
rpmbuild to strip binaries.
CPACK_RPM_SPEC_MORE_DEFINE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to add any %define lines to the generated spec file.
CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_DEBUG
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be set when invoking cpack in order to trace debug information
during CPack RPM run. For example you may launch CPack like this
cpack -D CPACK_RPM_PACKAGE_DEBUG=1 -G RPM
CPACK_RPM_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be set by the user in order to specify a USER binary spec file
to be used by CPackRPM instead of generating the file.
The specified file will be processed by CONFIGURE_FILE( @ONLY).
CPACK_RPM_GENERATE_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE_TEMPLATE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
If set CPack will generate a template for USER specified binary
spec file and stop with an error. For example launch CPack like this
cpack -D CPACK_RPM_GENERATE_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE_TEMPLATE=1 -G RPM
The user may then use this file in order to hand-craft is own
binary spec file which may be used with CPACK_RPM_USER_BINARY_SPECFILE.
CPACK_RPM_PRE_INSTALL_SCRIPT_FILE
CPACK_RPM_PRE_UNINSTALL_SCRIPT_FILE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to embbed a pre (un)installation script in the spec file.
The refered script file(s) will be read and directly
put after the %pre or %preun section
One may verify which scriptlet has been included with
rpm -qp --scripts package.rpm
CPACK_RPM_POST_INSTALL_SCRIPT_FILE
CPACK_RPM_POST_UNINSTALL_SCRIPT_FILE
Mandatory : NO
Default : -
May be used to embbed a post (un)installation script in the spec file.
The refered script file(s) will be read and directly
put after the %post or %postun section
One may verify which scriptlet has been included with
rpm -qp --scripts package.rpm
CTest Configure a project for testing with CTest/CDash
Include this module in the top CMakeLists.txt file of a project
to enable testing with CTest and dashboard submissions to CDash:
project(MyProject)
...
include(CTest)
The module automatically creates a BUILD_TESTING option that
selects whether to enable testing support (ON by default).
After including the module, use code like
if(BUILD_TESTING)
# ... CMake code to create tests ...
endif()
to creating tests when testing is enabled.
To enable submissions to a CDash server, create a
CTestConfig.cmake file at the top of the project with content
such as
set(CTEST_PROJECT_NAME "MyProject")
set(CTEST_NIGHTLY_START_TIME "01:00:00 UTC")
set(CTEST_DROP_METHOD "http")
set(CTEST_DROP_SITE "my.cdash.org")
set(CTEST_DROP_LOCATION "/submit.php?project=MyProject")
set(CTEST_DROP_SITE_CDASH TRUE)
(the CDash server can provide the file to a project
administrator who configures ’MyProject’). Settings in the
config file are shared by both this CTest module and the CTest
command-line tool’s dashboard script mode (ctest -S).
While building a project for submission to CDash, CTest scans
the build output for errors and warnings and reports them with
surrounding context from the build log. This generic approach
works for all build tools, but does not give details about the
command invocation that produced a given problem. One may get
more detailed reports by adding
set(CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS 1)
to the CTestConfig.cmake file. When this option is enabled, the
CTest module tells CMake’s Makefile generators to invoke every
command in the generated build system through a CTest launcher
program. (Currently the CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS option is ignored
on non-Makefile generators.) During a manual build each
launcher transparently runs the command it wraps. During a
CTest-driven build for submission to CDash each launcher reports
detailed information when its command fails or warns. (Setting
CTEST_USE_LAUNCHERS in CTestConfig.cmake is convenient, but also
adds the launcher overhead even for manual builds. One may
instead set it in a CTest dashboard script and add it to the
CMake cache for the build tree.)
CTestScriptMode
This file is read by ctest in script mode (-S)
CheckCCompilerFlag
Check whether the C compiler supports a given flag.
CHECK_C_COMPILER_FLAG(<flag> <var>)
<flag> - the compiler flag
<var> - variable to store the result
This internally calls the check_c_source_compiles macro. See
help for CheckCSourceCompiles for a listing of variables that
can modify the build.
CheckCSourceCompiles
Check if the given C source code compiles.
CHECK_C_SOURCE_COMPILES(<code> <var> [FAIL_REGEX <fail-regex>])
<code> - source code to try to compile
<var> - variable to store whether the source code compiled
<fail-regex> - fail if test output matches this regex
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckCSourceRuns
Check if the given C source code compiles and runs.
CHECK_C_SOURCE_RUNS(<code> <var>)
<code> - source code to try to compile
<var> - variable to store the result
(1 for success, empty for failure)
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckCXXCompilerFlag
Check whether the CXX compiler supports a given flag.
CHECK_CXX_COMPILER_FLAG(<flag> <var>)
<flag> - the compiler flag
<var> - variable to store the result
This internally calls the check_cxx_source_compiles macro. See
help for CheckCXXSourceCompiles for a listing of variables that
can modify the build.
CheckCXXSourceCompiles
Check if the given C++ source code compiles.
CHECK_CXX_SOURCE_COMPILES(<code> <var> [FAIL_REGEX
<fail-regex>])
<code> - source code to try to compile
<var> - variable to store whether the source code compiled
<fail-regex> - fail if test output matches this regex
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckCXXSourceRuns
Check if the given C++ source code compiles and runs.
CHECK_CXX_SOURCE_RUNS(<code> <var>)
<code> - source code to try to compile
<var> - variable to store the result
(1 for success, empty for failure)
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckFortranFunctionExists
macro which checks if the Fortran function exists
CHECK_FORTRAN_FUNCTION_EXISTS(FUNCTION VARIABLE)
FUNCTION - the name of the Fortran function
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckFunctionExists
macro which checks if the function exists
CHECK_FUNCTION_EXISTS(FUNCTION VARIABLE)
FUNCTION - the name of the function
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckIncludeFile
macro which checks the include file exists.
CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE(INCLUDE VARIABLE)
INCLUDE - name of include file
VARIABLE - variable to return result
an optional third argument is the CFlags to add to the compile
line or you can use CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CheckIncludeFileCXX
Check if the include file exists.
CHECK_INCLUDE_FILE_CXX(INCLUDE VARIABLE)
INCLUDE - name of include file
VARIABLE - variable to return result
An optional third argument is the CFlags to add to the compile
line or you can use CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS.
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CheckIncludeFiles
Check if the files can be included
CHECK_INCLUDE_FILES(INCLUDE VARIABLE)
INCLUDE - list of files to include
VARIABLE - variable to return result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CheckLibraryExists
Check if the function exists.
CHECK_LIBRARY_EXISTS (LIBRARY FUNCTION LOCATION VARIABLE)
LIBRARY - the name of the library you are looking for
FUNCTION - the name of the function
LOCATION - location where the library should be found
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckStructHasMember
Check if the given struct or class has the specified member
variable
CHECK_STRUCT_HAS_MEMBER (STRUCT MEMBER HEADER VARIABLE)
STRUCT - the name of the struct or class you are interested in
MEMBER - the member which existence you want to check
HEADER - the header(s) where the prototype should be declared
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
Example: CHECK_STRUCT_HAS_MEMBER("struct timeval" tv_sec
sys/select.h HAVE_TIMEVAL_TV_SEC)
CheckSymbolExists
Check if the symbol exists in include files
CHECK_SYMBOL_EXISTS(SYMBOL FILES VARIABLE)
SYMBOL - symbol
FILES - include files to check
VARIABLE - variable to return result
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CheckTypeSize
Check sizeof a type
CHECK_TYPE_SIZE(TYPE VARIABLE [BUILTIN_TYPES_ONLY])
Check if the type exists and determine its size. On return,
"HAVE_${VARIABLE}" holds the existence of the type, and
"${VARIABLE}" holds one of the following:
<size> = type has non-zero size <size>
"0" = type has arch-dependent size (see below)
"" = type does not exist
Furthermore, the variable "${VARIABLE}_CODE" holds C
preprocessor code to define the macro "${VARIABLE}" to the size
of the type, or leave the macro undefined if the type does not
exist.
The variable "${VARIABLE}" may be "0" when
CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES has multiple architectures for building
OS X universal binaries. This indicates that the type size
varies across architectures. In this case "${VARIABLE}_CODE"
contains C preprocessor tests mapping from each architecture
macro to the corresponding type size. The list of architecture
macros is stored in "${VARIABLE}_KEYS", and the value for each
key is stored in "${VARIABLE}-${KEY}".
If the BUILTIN_TYPES_ONLY option is not given, the macro checks
for headers <sys/types.h>, <stdint.h>, and <stddef.h>, and saves
results in HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H, HAVE_STDINT_H, and HAVE_STDDEF_H.
The type size check automatically includes the available
headers, thus supporting checks of types defined in the headers.
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_INCLUDES = list of include directories
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
CMAKE_EXTRA_INCLUDE_FILES = list of extra headers to include
CheckVariableExists
Check if the variable exists.
CHECK_VARIABLE_EXISTS(VAR VARIABLE)
VAR - the name of the variable
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
This macro is only for C variables.
The following variables may be set before calling this macro to
modify the way the check is run:
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS = string of compile command line flags
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS = list of macros to define (-DFOO=bar)
CMAKE_REQUIRED_LIBRARIES = list of libraries to link
Dart Configure a project for testing with CTest or old Dart Tcl
Client
This file is the backwards-compatibility version of the CTest
module. It supports using the old Dart 1 Tcl client for driving
dashboard submissions as well as testing with CTest. This
module should be included in the CMakeLists.txt file at the top
of a project. Typical usage:
INCLUDE(Dart)
IF(BUILD_TESTING)
# ... testing related CMake code ...
ENDIF(BUILD_TESTING)
The BUILD_TESTING option is created by the Dart module to
determine whether testing support should be enabled. The
default is ON.
Documentation
DocumentationVTK.cmake
This file provides support for the VTK documentation framework.
It relies on several tools (Doxygen, Perl, etc).
ExternalProject
Create custom targets to build projects in external trees
The ’ExternalProject_Add’ function creates a custom target to
drive download, update/patch, configure, build, install and test
steps of an external project:
ExternalProject_Add(<name> # Name for custom target
[DEPENDS projects...] # Targets on which the project depends
[PREFIX dir] # Root dir for entire project
[LIST_SEPARATOR sep] # Sep to be replaced by ; in cmd lines
[TMP_DIR dir] # Directory to store temporary files
[STAMP_DIR dir] # Directory to store step timestamps
#--Download step--------------
[DOWNLOAD_DIR dir] # Directory to store downloaded files
[DOWNLOAD_COMMAND cmd...] # Command to download source tree
[CVS_REPOSITORY cvsroot] # CVSROOT of CVS repository
[CVS_MODULE mod] # Module to checkout from CVS repo
[CVS_TAG tag] # Tag to checkout from CVS repo
[SVN_REPOSITORY url] # URL of Subversion repo
[SVN_REVISION rev] # Revision to checkout from Subversion repo
[SVN_USERNAME john ] # Username for Subversion checkout and update
[SVN_PASSWORD doe ] # Password for Subversion checkout and update
[GIT_REPOSITORY url] # URL of git repo
[GIT_TAG tag] # Git branch name, commit id or tag
[URL /.../src.tgz] # Full path or URL of source
[URL_MD5 md5] # MD5 checksum of file at URL
[TIMEOUT seconds] # Time allowed for file download operations
#--Update/Patch step----------
[UPDATE_COMMAND cmd...] # Source work-tree update command
[PATCH_COMMAND cmd...] # Command to patch downloaded source
#--Configure step-------------
[SOURCE_DIR dir] # Source dir to be used for build
[CONFIGURE_COMMAND cmd...] # Build tree configuration command
[CMAKE_COMMAND /.../cmake] # Specify alternative cmake executable
[CMAKE_GENERATOR gen] # Specify generator for native build
[CMAKE_ARGS args...] # Arguments to CMake command line
#--Build step-----------------
[BINARY_DIR dir] # Specify build dir location
[BUILD_COMMAND cmd...] # Command to drive the native build
[BUILD_IN_SOURCE 1] # Use source dir for build dir
#--Install step---------------
[INSTALL_DIR dir] # Installation prefix
[INSTALL_COMMAND cmd...] # Command to drive install after build
#--Test step---------------
[TEST_BEFORE_INSTALL 1] # Add test step executed before install step
[TEST_AFTER_INSTALL 1] # Add test step executed after install step
[TEST_COMMAND cmd...] # Command to drive test
)
The *_DIR options specify directories for the project, with
default directories computed as follows. If the PREFIX option is
given to ExternalProject_Add() or the EP_PREFIX directory
property is set, then an external project is built and installed
under the specified prefix:
TMP_DIR = <prefix>/tmp
STAMP_DIR = <prefix>/src/<name>-stamp
DOWNLOAD_DIR = <prefix>/src
SOURCE_DIR = <prefix>/src/<name>
BINARY_DIR = <prefix>/src/<name>-build
INSTALL_DIR = <prefix>
Otherwise, if the EP_BASE directory property is set then
components of an external project are stored under the specified
base:
TMP_DIR = <base>/tmp/<name>
STAMP_DIR = <base>/Stamp/<name>
DOWNLOAD_DIR = <base>/Download/<name>
SOURCE_DIR = <base>/Source/<name>
BINARY_DIR = <base>/Build/<name>
INSTALL_DIR = <base>/Install/<name>
If no PREFIX, EP_PREFIX, or EP_BASE is specified then the
default is to set PREFIX to "<name>-prefix". Relative paths are
interpreted with respect to the build directory corresponding to
the source directory in which ExternalProject_Add is invoked.
If SOURCE_DIR is explicitly set to an existing directory the
project will be built from it. Otherwise a download step must be
specified using one of the DOWNLOAD_COMMAND, CVS_*, SVN_*, or
URL options. The URL option may refer locally to a directory or
source tarball, or refer to a remote tarball (e.g.
http://.../src.tgz).
The ’ExternalProject_Add_Step’ function adds a custom step to an
external project:
ExternalProject_Add_Step(<name> <step> # Names of project and custom step
[COMMAND cmd...] # Command line invoked by this step
[COMMENT "text..."] # Text printed when step executes
[DEPENDEES steps...] # Steps on which this step depends
[DEPENDERS steps...] # Steps that depend on this step
[DEPENDS files...] # Files on which this step depends
[ALWAYS 1] # No stamp file, step always runs
[WORKING_DIRECTORY dir] # Working directory for command
)
The command line, comment, and working directory of every
standard and custom step is processed to replace tokens
<SOURCE_DIR>, <BINARY_DIR>, <INSTALL_DIR>, and <TMP_DIR> with
corresponding property values.
The ’ExternalProject_Get_Property’ function retrieves external
project target properties:
ExternalProject_Get_Property(<name> [prop1 [prop2 [...]]])
It stores property values in variables of the same name.
Property names correspond to the keyword argument names of
’ExternalProject_Add’.
FeatureSummary
Macros for generating a summary of enabled/disabled features
PRINT_ENABLED_FEATURES()
Print a summary of all enabled features. By default all successfull
FIND_PACKAGE() calls will appear here, except the ones which used the
QUIET keyword. Additional features can be added by appending an entry
to the global ENABLED_FEATURES property. If SET_FEATURE_INFO() is
used for that feature, the output will be much more informative.
PRINT_DISABLED_FEATURES()
Same as PRINT_ENABLED_FEATURES(), but for disabled features. It can
be extended the same way by adding to the global property
DISABLED_FEATURES.
SET_FEATURE_INFO(NAME DESCRIPTION [URL [COMMENT] ] )
Use this macro to set up information about the named feature, which will
then be displayed by PRINT_ENABLED/DISABLED_FEATURES().
Example: SET_FEATURE_INFO(LibXml2 "XML processing library."
"http://xmlsoft.org/")
FindALSA
Find alsa
Find the alsa libraries (asound)
This module defines the following variables:
ALSA_FOUND - True if ALSA_INCLUDE_DIR & ALSA_LIBRARY are found
ALSA_LIBRARIES - Set when ALSA_LIBRARY is found
ALSA_INCLUDE_DIRS - Set when ALSA_INCLUDE_DIR is found
ALSA_INCLUDE_DIR - where to find asoundlib.h, etc.
ALSA_LIBRARY - the asound library
FindASPELL
Try to find ASPELL
Once done this will define
ASPELL_FOUND - system has ASPELL
ASPELL_INCLUDE_DIR - the ASPELL include directory
ASPELL_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use ASPELL
ASPELL_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using ASPELL
FindAVIFile
Locate AVIFILE library and include paths
AVIFILE (http://avifile.sourceforge.net/)is a set of libraries
for i386 machines to use various AVI codecs. Support is limited
beyond Linux. Windows provides native AVI support, and so
doesn’t need this library. This module defines
AVIFILE_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find avifile.h , etc.
AVIFILE_LIBRARIES, the libraries to link against
AVIFILE_DEFINITIONS, definitions to use when compiling
AVIFILE_FOUND, If false, don’t try to use AVIFILE
FindBISON
Find bison executable and provides macros to generate custom
build rules
The module defines the following variables:
BISON_EXECUTABLE - path to the bison program
BISON_VERSION - version of bison
BISON_FOUND - true if the program was found
If bison is found, the module defines the macros:
BISON_TARGET(<Name> <YaccInput> <CodeOutput> [VERBOSE <file>]
[COMPILE_FLAGS <string>])
which will create a custom rule to generate a parser.
<YaccInput> is the path to a yacc file. <CodeOutput> is the
name of the source file generated by bison. A header file is
also be generated, and contains the token list. If
COMPILE_FLAGS option is specified, the next parameter is
added in the bison command line. if VERBOSE option is
specified, <file> is created and contains verbose descriptions
of the grammar and parser. The macro defines a set of variables:
BISON_${Name}_DEFINED - true is the macro ran successfully
BISON_${Name}_INPUT - The input source file, an alias for <YaccInput>
BISON_${Name}_OUTPUT_SOURCE - The source file generated by bison
BISON_${Name}_OUTPUT_HEADER - The header file generated by bison
BISON_${Name}_OUTPUTS - The sources files generated by bison
BISON_${Name}_COMPILE_FLAGS - Options used in the bison command line
====================================================================
Example:
find_package(BISON)
BISON_TARGET(MyParser parser.y ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/parser.cpp)
add_executable(Foo main.cpp ${BISON_MyParser_OUTPUTS})
====================================================================
FindBLAS
Find BLAS library
This module finds an installed fortran library that implements
the BLAS linear-algebra interface (see
http://www.netlib.org/blas/). The list of libraries searched for
is taken from the autoconf macro file, acx_blas.m4 (distributed
at http://ac-archive.sourceforge.net/ac-archive/acx_blas.html).
This module sets the following variables:
BLAS_FOUND - set to true if a library implementing the BLAS interface
is found
BLAS_LINKER_FLAGS - uncached list of required linker flags (excluding -l
and -L).
BLAS_LIBRARIES - uncached list of libraries (using full path name) to
link against to use BLAS
BLAS95_LIBRARIES - uncached list of libraries (using full path name)
to link against to use BLAS95 interface
BLAS95_FOUND - set to true if a library implementing the BLAS f95 interface
is found
BLA_STATIC if set on this determines what kind of linkage we do (static)
BLA_VENDOR if set checks only the specified vendor, if not set checks
all the possibilities
BLA_F95 if set on tries to find the f95 interfaces for BLAS/LAPACK
######### ## List of vendors (BLA_VENDOR) valid in this module #
ATLAS, PhiPACK,CXML,DXML,SunPerf,SCSL,SGIMATH,IBMESSL,Intel10_32
(intel mkl v10 32 bit),Intel10_64lp (intel mkl v10 64 bit,lp
thread model, lp64 model), # Intel( older versions of mkl 32
and 64 bit), ACML,Apple, NAS, Generic C/CXX should be enabled to
use Intel mkl
FindBZip2
Try to find BZip2
Once done this will define
BZIP2_FOUND - system has BZip2
BZIP2_INCLUDE_DIR - the BZip2 include directory
BZIP2_LIBRARIES - Link these to use BZip2
BZIP2_NEED_PREFIX - this is set if the functions are prefixed with BZ2_
FindBoost
Try to find Boost include dirs and libraries
Usage of this module as follows:
NOTE: Take note of the Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS variable below.
Due to Boost naming conventions and limitations in CMake this
find module is NOT future safe with respect to Boost version
numbers, and may break.
== Using Header-Only libraries from within Boost: ==
find_package( Boost 1.36.0 )
if(Boost_FOUND)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(foo foo.cc)
endif()
== Using actual libraries from within Boost: ==
set(Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS ON)
set(Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED ON)
find_package( Boost 1.36.0 COMPONENTS date_time filesystem system ... )
if(Boost_FOUND)
include_directories(${Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(foo foo.cc)
target_link_libraries(foo ${Boost_LIBRARIES})
endif()
The components list needs to contain actual names of boost
libraries only, such as "date_time" for "libboost_date_time".
If you’re using parts of Boost that contain header files only
(e.g. foreach) you do not need to specify COMPONENTS.
You should provide a minimum version number that should be used.
If you provide this version number and specify the REQUIRED
attribute, this module will fail if it can’t find the specified
or a later version. If you specify a version number this is
automatically put into the considered list of version numbers
and thus doesn’t need to be specified in the
Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS variable (see below).
NOTE for Visual Studio Users:
Automatic linking is used on MSVC & Borland compilers by default when
#including things in Boost. It’s important to note that setting
Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS to OFF is NOT enough to get you dynamic linking,
should you need this feature. Automatic linking typically uses static
libraries with a few exceptions (Boost.Python is one).
Please see the section below near Boost_LIB_DIAGNOSTIC_DEFINITIONS for
more details. Adding a TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES() as shown in the example
above appears to cause VS to link dynamically if Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS
gets set to OFF. It is suggested you avoid automatic linking since it
will make your application less portable.
=========== The mess that is Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS (sorry?)
============
OK, so the Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS variable can be used to
specify a list of boost version numbers that should be taken
into account when searching for Boost. Unfortunately boost puts
the version number into the actual filename for the libraries,
so this variable will certainly be needed in the future when new
Boost versions are released.
Currently this module searches for the following version
numbers: 1.33, 1.33.0, 1.33.1, 1.34, 1.34.0, 1.34.1, 1.35,
1.35.0, 1.35.1, 1.36, 1.36.0, 1.36.1, 1.37, 1.37.0, 1.38,
1.38.0, 1.39, 1.39.0, 1.40, 1.40.0, 1.41, 1.41.0
NOTE: If you add a new major 1.x version in
Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS you should add both 1.x and 1.x.0 as
shown above. Official Boost include directories omit the 3rd
version number from include paths if it is 0 although not all
binary Boost releases do so.
SET(Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS "1.78" "1.78.0" "1.79" "1.79.0")
===================================== =============
========================
Variables used by this module, they can change the default
behaviour and need to be set before calling find_package:
Boost_USE_MULTITHREADED Can be set to OFF to use the non-multithreaded
boost libraries. If not specified, defaults
to ON.
Boost_USE_STATIC_LIBS Can be set to ON to force the use of the static
boost libraries. Defaults to OFF.
Other Variables used by this module which you may want to set.
Boost_ADDITIONAL_VERSIONS A list of version numbers to use for searching
the boost include directory. Please see
the documentation above regarding this
annoying, but necessary variable :(
Boost_DEBUG Set this to TRUE to enable debugging output
of FindBoost.cmake if you are having problems.
Please enable this before filing any bug
reports.
Boost_DETAILED_FAILURE_MSG FindBoost doesn’t output detailed information
about why it failed or how to fix the problem
unless this is set to TRUE or the REQUIRED
keyword is specified in find_package().
[Since CMake 2.8.0]
Boost_COMPILER Set this to the compiler suffix used by Boost
(e.g. "-gcc43") if FindBoost has problems finding
the proper Boost installation
These last three variables are available also as environment
variables:
BOOST_ROOT or BOOSTROOT The preferred installation prefix for searching for
Boost. Set this if the module has problems finding
the proper Boost installation.
BOOST_INCLUDEDIR Set this to the include directory of Boost, if the
module has problems finding the proper Boost installation
BOOST_LIBRARYDIR Set this to the lib directory of Boost, if the
module has problems finding the proper Boost installation
Variables defined by this module:
Boost_FOUND System has Boost, this means the include dir was
found, as well as all the libraries specified in
the COMPONENTS list.
Boost_INCLUDE_DIRS Boost include directories: not cached
Boost_INCLUDE_DIR This is almost the same as above, but this one is
cached and may be modified by advanced users
Boost_LIBRARIES Link to these to use the Boost libraries that you
specified: not cached
Boost_LIBRARY_DIRS The path to where the Boost library files are.
Boost_VERSION The version number of the boost libraries that
have been found, same as in version.hpp from Boost
Boost_LIB_VERSION The version number in filename form as
it’s appended to the library filenames
Boost_MAJOR_VERSION major version number of boost
Boost_MINOR_VERSION minor version number of boost
Boost_SUBMINOR_VERSION subminor version number of boost
Boost_LIB_DIAGNOSTIC_DEFINITIONS [WIN32 Only] You can call
add_definitions(${Boost_LIB_DIAGNOSTIC_DEFINITIONS})
to have diagnostic information about Boost’s
automatic linking outputted during compilation time.
For each component you specify in find_package(), the following
(UPPER-CASE) variables are set. You can use these variables if
you would like to pick and choose components for your targets
instead of just using Boost_LIBRARIES.
Boost_${COMPONENT}_FOUND True IF the Boost library "component" was found.
Boost_${COMPONENT}_LIBRARY Contains the libraries for the specified Boost
"component" (includes debug and optimized keywords
when needed).
FindBullet
Try to find the Bullet physics engine
This module defines the following variables
BULLET_FOUND - Was bullet found
BULLET_INCLUDE_DIRS - the Bullet include directories
BULLET_LIBRARIES - Link to this, by default it includes
all bullet components (Dynamics,
Collision, LinearMath, & SoftBody)
This module accepts the following variables
BULLET_ROOT - Can be set to bullet install path or Windows build path
FindCABLE
Find CABLE
This module finds if CABLE is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. This code sets the following
variables:
CABLE the path to the cable executable
CABLE_TCL_LIBRARY the path to the Tcl wrapper library
CABLE_INCLUDE_DIR the path to the include directory
To build Tcl wrappers, you should add shared library and link it
to ${CABLE_TCL_LIBRARY}. You should also add
${CABLE_INCLUDE_DIR} as an include directory.
FindCUDA
Tools for building CUDA C files: libraries and build
dependencies.
This script locates the NVIDIA CUDA C tools. It should work on
linux, windows, and mac and should be reasonably up to date with
CUDA C releases.
This script makes use of the standard find_package arguments of
<VERSION>, REQUIRED and QUIET. CUDA_FOUND will report if an
acceptable version of CUDA was found.
The script will prompt the user to specify CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR
if the prefix cannot be determined by the location of nvcc in
the system path and REQUIRED is specified to find_package(). To
use a different installed version of the toolkit set the
environment variable CUDA_BIN_PATH before running cmake (e.g.
CUDA_BIN_PATH=/usr/local/cuda1.0 instead of the default
/usr/local/cuda) or set CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR after configuring.
If you change the value of CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR, various
components that depend on the path will be relocated.
It might be necessary to set CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR manually on
certain platforms, or to use a cuda runtime not installed in the
default location. In newer versions of the toolkit the cuda
library is included with the graphics driver- be sure that the
driver version matches what is needed by the cuda runtime
version.
The following variables affect the behavior of the macros in the
script (in alphebetical order). Note that any of these flags
can be changed multiple times in the same directory before
calling CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE, CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY, CUDA_COMPILE,
CUDA_COMPILE_PTX or CUDA_WRAP_SRCS.
CUDA_64_BIT_DEVICE_CODE (Default matches host bit size)
-- Set to ON to compile for 64 bit device code, OFF for 32 bit device code.
Note that making this different from the host code when generating object
or C files from CUDA code just won’t work, because size_t gets defined by
nvcc in the generated source. If you compile to PTX and then load the
file yourself, you can mix bit sizes between device and host.
CUDA_ATTACH_VS_BUILD_RULE_TO_CUDA_FILE (Default ON)
-- Set to ON if you want the custom build rule to be attached to the source
file in Visual Studio. Turn OFF if you add the same cuda file to multiple
targets.
This allows the user to build the target from the CUDA file; however, bad
things can happen if the CUDA source file is added to multiple targets.
When performing parallel builds it is possible for the custom build
command to be run more than once and in parallel causing cryptic build
errors. VS runs the rules for every source file in the target, and a
source can have only one rule no matter how many projects it is added to.
When the rule is run from multiple targets race conditions can occur on
the generated file. Eventually everything will get built, but if the user
is unaware of this behavior, there may be confusion. It would be nice if
this script could detect the reuse of source files across multiple targets
and turn the option off for the user, but no good solution could be found.
CUDA_BUILD_CUBIN (Default OFF)
-- Set to ON to enable and extra compilation pass with the -cubin option in
Device mode. The output is parsed and register, shared memory usage is
printed during build.
CUDA_BUILD_EMULATION (Default OFF for device mode)
-- Set to ON for Emulation mode. -D_DEVICEEMU is defined for CUDA C files
when CUDA_BUILD_EMULATION is TRUE.
CUDA_GENERATED_OUTPUT_DIR (Default CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR)
-- Set to the path you wish to have the generated files placed. If it is
blank output files will be placed in CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR.
Intermediate files will always be placed in
CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR/CMakeFiles.
CUDA_HOST_COMPILATION_CPP (Default ON)
-- Set to OFF for C compilation of host code.
CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS
CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS_<CONFIG>
-- Additional NVCC command line arguments. NOTE: multiple arguments must be
semi-colon delimited (e.g. --compiler-options;-Wall)
CUDA_PROPAGATE_HOST_FLAGS (Default ON)
-- Set to ON to propagate CMAKE_{C,CXX}_FLAGS and their configuration
dependent counterparts (e.g. CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG) automatically to the
host compiler through nvcc’s -Xcompiler flag. This helps make the
generated host code match the rest of the system better. Sometimes
certain flags give nvcc problems, and this will help you turn the flag
propagation off. This does not affect the flags supplied directly to nvcc
via CUDA_NVCC_FLAGS or through the OPTION flags specified through
CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY, CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE, or CUDA_WRAP_SRCS. Flags used for
shared library compilation are not affected by this flag.
CUDA_VERBOSE_BUILD (Default OFF)
-- Set to ON to see all the commands used when building the CUDA file. When
using a Makefile generator the value defaults to VERBOSE (run make
VERBOSE=1 to see output), although setting CUDA_VERBOSE_BUILD to ON will
always print the output.
The script creates the following macros (in alphebetical order):
CUDA_ADD_CUFFT_TO_TARGET( cuda_target )
-- Adds the cufft library to the target (can be any target). Handles whether
you are in emulation mode or not.
CUDA_ADD_CUBLAS_TO_TARGET( cuda_target )
-- Adds the cublas library to the target (can be any target). Handles
whether you are in emulation mode or not.
CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE( cuda_target file0 file1 ...
[WIN32] [MACOSX_BUNDLE] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] [OPTIONS ...] )
-- Creates an executable "cuda_target" which is made up of the files
specified. All of the non CUDA C files are compiled using the standard
build rules specified by CMAKE and the cuda files are compiled to object
files using nvcc and the host compiler. In addition CUDA_INCLUDE_DIRS is
added automatically to include_directories(). Some standard CMake target
calls can be used on the target after calling this macro
(e.g. set_target_properties and target_link_libraries), but setting
properties that adjust compilation flags will not affect code compiled by
nvcc. Such flags should be modified before calling CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE,
CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY or CUDA_WRAP_SRCS.
CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY( cuda_target file0 file1 ...
[STATIC | SHARED | MODULE] [EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL] [OPTIONS ...] )
-- Same as CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE except that a library is created.
CUDA_BUILD_CLEAN_TARGET()
-- Creates a convience target that deletes all the dependency files
generated. You should make clean after running this target to ensure the
dependency files get regenerated.
CUDA_COMPILE( generated_files file0 file1 ... [STATIC | SHARED | MODULE]
[OPTIONS ...] )
-- Returns a list of generated files from the input source files to be used
with ADD_LIBRARY or ADD_EXECUTABLE.
CUDA_COMPILE_PTX( generated_files file0 file1 ... [OPTIONS ...] )
-- Returns a list of PTX files generated from the input source files.
CUDA_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES( path0 path1 ... )
-- Sets the directories that should be passed to nvcc
(e.g. nvcc -Ipath0 -Ipath1 ... ). These paths usually contain other .cu
files.
CUDA_WRAP_SRCS ( cuda_target format generated_files file0 file1 ...
[STATIC | SHARED | MODULE] [OPTIONS ...] )
-- This is where all the magic happens. CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE,
CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY, CUDA_COMPILE, and CUDA_COMPILE_PTX all call this
function under the hood.
Given the list of files (file0 file1 ... fileN) this macro generates
custom commands that generate either PTX or linkable objects (use "PTX" or
"OBJ" for the format argument to switch). Files that don’t end with .cu
or have the HEADER_FILE_ONLY property are ignored.
The arguments passed in after OPTIONS are extra command line options to
give to nvcc. You can also specify per configuration options by
specifying the name of the configuration followed by the options. General
options must preceed configuration specific options. Not all
configurations need to be specified, only the ones provided will be used.
OPTIONS -DFLAG=2 "-DFLAG_OTHER=space in flag"
DEBUG -g
RELEASE --use_fast_math
RELWITHDEBINFO --use_fast_math;-g
MINSIZEREL --use_fast_math
For certain configurations (namely VS generating object files with
CUDA_ATTACH_VS_BUILD_RULE_TO_CUDA_FILE set to ON), no generated file will
be produced for the given cuda file. This is because when you add the
cuda file to Visual Studio it knows that this file produces an object file
and will link in the resulting object file automatically.
This script will also generate a separate cmake script that is used at
build time to invoke nvcc. This is for several reasons.
1. nvcc can return negative numbers as return values which confuses
Visual Studio into thinking that the command succeeded. The script now
checks the error codes and produces errors when there was a problem.
2. nvcc has been known to not delete incomplete results when it
encounters problems. This confuses build systems into thinking the
target was generated when in fact an unusable file exists. The script
now deletes the output files if there was an error.
3. By putting all the options that affect the build into a file and then
make the build rule dependent on the file, the output files will be
regenerated when the options change.
This script also looks at optional arguments STATIC, SHARED, or MODULE to
determine when to target the object compilation for a shared library.
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS is ignored in CUDA_WRAP_SRCS, but it is respected in
CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY. On some systems special flags are added for building
objects intended for shared libraries. A preprocessor macro,
<target_name>_EXPORTS is defined when a shared library compilation is
detected.
Flags passed into add_definitions with -D or /D are passed along to nvcc.
The script defines the following variables:
CUDA_VERSION_MAJOR -- The major version of cuda as reported by nvcc.
CUDA_VERSION_MINOR -- The minor version.
CUDA_VERSION
CUDA_VERSION_STRING -- CUDA_VERSION_MAJOR.CUDA_VERSION_MINOR
CUDA_TOOLKIT_ROOT_DIR -- Path to the CUDA Toolkit (defined if not set).
CUDA_SDK_ROOT_DIR -- Path to the CUDA SDK. Use this to find files in the
SDK. This script will not directly support finding
specific libraries or headers, as that isn’t
supported by NVIDIA. If you want to change
libraries when the path changes see the
FindCUDA.cmake script for an example of how to clear
these variables. There are also examples of how to
use the CUDA_SDK_ROOT_DIR to locate headers or
libraries, if you so choose (at your own risk).
CUDA_INCLUDE_DIRS -- Include directory for cuda headers. Added automatically
for CUDA_ADD_EXECUTABLE and CUDA_ADD_LIBRARY.
CUDA_LIBRARIES -- Cuda RT library.
CUDA_CUFFT_LIBRARIES -- Device or emulation library for the Cuda FFT
implementation (alternative to:
CUDA_ADD_CUFFT_TO_TARGET macro)
CUDA_CUBLAS_LIBRARIES -- Device or emulation library for the Cuda BLAS
implementation (alterative to:
CUDA_ADD_CUBLAS_TO_TARGET macro).
James Bigler, NVIDIA Corp (nvidia.com - jbigler)
Abe Stephens, SCI Institute -- http://www.sci.utah.edu/~abe/FindCuda.html
Copyright (c) 2008 - 2009 NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2007-2009
Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah
This code is licensed under the MIT License. See the FindCUDA.cmake script
for the text of the license.
FindCURL
Find curl
Find the native CURL headers and libraries.
CURL_INCLUDE_DIRS - where to find curl/curl.h, etc.
CURL_LIBRARIES - List of libraries when using curl.
CURL_FOUND - True if curl found.
FindCVS
The module defines the following variables:
CVS_EXECUTABLE - path to cvs command line client
CVS_FOUND - true if the command line client was found
Example usage:
find_package(CVS)
if(CVS_FOUND)
message("CVS found: ${CVS_EXECUTABLE}")
endif(CVS_FOUND)
FindCoin3D
Find Coin3D (Open Inventor)
Coin3D is an implementation of the Open Inventor API. It
provides data structures and algorithms for 3D visualization
http://www.coin3d.org/
This module defines the following variables
COIN3D_FOUND - system has Coin3D - Open Inventor
COIN3D_INCLUDE_DIRS - where the Inventor include directory can be found
COIN3D_LIBRARIES - Link to this to use Coin3D
FindCups
Try to find the Cups printing system
Once done this will define
CUPS_FOUND - system has Cups
CUPS_INCLUDE_DIR - the Cups include directory
CUPS_LIBRARIES - Libraries needed to use Cups
Set CUPS_REQUIRE_IPP_DELETE_ATTRIBUTE to TRUE if you need a version which
features this function (i.e. at least 1.1.19)
FindCurses
Find the curses include file and library
CURSES_FOUND - system has Curses
CURSES_INCLUDE_DIR - the Curses include directory
CURSES_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use Curses
CURSES_HAVE_CURSES_H - true if curses.h is available
CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_H - true if ncurses.h is available
CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_NCURSES_H - true if ncurses/ncurses.h is available
CURSES_HAVE_NCURSES_CURSES_H - true if ncurses/curses.h is available
CURSES_LIBRARY - set for backwards compatibility with 2.4 CMake
Set CURSES_NEED_NCURSES to TRUE before the FIND_PACKAGE()
command if NCurses functionality is required.
FindCxxTest
Find CxxTest
Find the CxxTest suite and declare a helper macro for creating
unit tests and integrating them with CTest. For more details on
CxxTest see http://cxxtest.tigris.org
INPUT Variables
CXXTEST_USE_PYTHON
If true, the CXXTEST_ADD_TEST macro will use
the Python test generator instead of Perl.
OUTPUT Variables
CXXTEST_FOUND
True if the CxxTest framework was found
CXXTEST_INCLUDE_DIR
Where to find the CxxTest include directory
CXXTEST_PERL_TESTGEN_EXECUTABLE
The perl-based test generator.
CXXTEST_PYTHON_TESTGEN_EXECUTABLE
The python-based test generator.
MACROS for optional use by CMake users:
CXXTEST_ADD_TEST(<test_name> <gen_source_file> <input_files_to_testgen...>)
Creates a CxxTest runner and adds it to the CTest testing suite
Parameters:
test_name The name of the test
gen_source_file The generated source filename to be generated by CxxTest
input_files_to_testgen The list of header files containing the
CxxTest::TestSuite’s to be included in this runner
#==============
Example Usage:
find_package(CxxTest)
if(CXXTEST_FOUND)
include_directories(${CXXTEST_INCLUDE_DIR})
enable_testing()
CXXTEST_ADD_TEST(unittest_foo foo_test.cc
${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/foo_test.h)
target_link_libraries(unittest_foo foo) # as needed
endif()
This will (if CxxTest is found):
1. Invoke the testgen executable to autogenerate foo_test.cc in the
binary tree from "foo_test.h" in the current source directory.
2. Create an executable and test called unittest_foo.
#=============
Example foo_test.h:
#include <cxxtest/TestSuite.h>
class MyTestSuite : public CxxTest::TestSuite
{
public:
void testAddition( void )
{
TS_ASSERT( 1 + 1 > 1 );
TS_ASSERT_EQUALS( 1 + 1, 2 );
}
};
FindCygwin
this module looks for Cygwin
FindDCMTK
find DCMTK libraries and applications
FindDart
Find DART
This module looks for the dart testing software and sets
DART_ROOT to point to where it found it.
FindDevIL
This module locates the developer’s image library.
http://openil.sourceforge.net/
This module sets: IL_LIBRARIES the name of the IL library. These
include the full path to the core DevIL library. This one has to
be linked into the application. ILU_LIBRARIES the name of the
ILU library. Again, the full path. This library is for filters
and effects, not actual loading. It doesn’t have to be linked if
the functionality it provides is not used. ILUT_LIBRARIES the
name of the ILUT library. Full path. This part of the library
interfaces with OpenGL. It is not strictly needed in
applications. IL_INCLUDE_DIR where to find the il.h, ilu.h and
ilut.h files. IL_FOUND this is set to TRUE if all the above
variables were set. This will be set to false if ILU or ILUT are
not found, even if they are not needed. In most systems, if one
library is found all the others are as well. That’s the way the
DevIL developers release it.
FindDoxygen
This module looks for Doxygen and the path to Graphviz’s dot
Doxygen is a documentation generation tool. Please see
http://www.doxygen.org
This module accepts the following optional variables:
DOXYGEN_SKIP_DOT = If true this module will skip trying to find Dot
(an optional component often used by Doxygen)
This modules defines the following variables:
DOXYGEN_EXECUTABLE = The path to the doxygen command.
DOXYGEN_FOUND = Was Doxygen found or not?
DOXYGEN_DOT_EXECUTABLE = The path to the dot program used by doxygen.
DOXYGEN_DOT_FOUND = Was Dot found or not?
DOXYGEN_DOT_PATH = The path to dot not including the executable
FindEXPAT
Find expat
Find the native EXPAT headers and libraries.
EXPAT_INCLUDE_DIRS - where to find expat.h, etc.
EXPAT_LIBRARIES - List of libraries when using expat.
EXPAT_FOUND - True if expat found.
FindFLEX
Find flex executable and provides a macro to generate custom
build rules
The module defines the following variables:
FLEX_FOUND - true is flex executable is found
FLEX_EXECUTABLE - the path to the flex executable
FLEX_VERSION - the version of flex
FLEX_LIBRARIES - The flex libraries
If flex is found on the system, the module provides the macro:
FLEX_TARGET(Name FlexInput FlexOutput [COMPILE_FLAGS <string>])
which creates a custom command to generate the <FlexOutput>
file from the <FlexInput> file. If COMPILE_FLAGS option is
specified, the next parameter is added to the flex command
line. Name is an alias used to get details of this custom
command. Indeed the macro defines the following variables:
FLEX_${Name}_DEFINED - true is the macro ran successfully
FLEX_${Name}_OUTPUTS - the source file generated by the custom rule, an
alias for FlexOutput
FLEX_${Name}_INPUT - the flex source file, an alias for ${FlexInput}
Flex scanners oftenly use tokens defined by Bison: the code
generated by Flex depends of the header generated by Bison.
This module also defines a macro:
ADD_FLEX_BISON_DEPENDENCY(FlexTarget BisonTarget)
which adds the required dependency between a scanner and a
parser where <FlexTarget> and <BisonTarget> are the first
parameters of respectively FLEX_TARGET and BISON_TARGET macros.
====================================================================
Example:
find_package(BISON)
find_package(FLEX)
BISON_TARGET(MyParser parser.y ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/parser.cpp
FLEX_TARGET(MyScanner lexer.l ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BIANRY_DIR}/lexer.cpp)
ADD_FLEX_BISON_DEPENDENCY(MyScanner MyParser)
include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
add_executable(Foo
Foo.cc
${BISON_MyParser_OUTPUTS}
${FLEX_MyScanner_OUTPUTS}
)
====================================================================
FindFLTK
Find the native FLTK includes and library
By default FindFLTK.cmake will search for all of the FLTK
components and add them to the FLTK_LIBRARIES variable.
You can limit the components which get placed in FLTK_LIBRARIES by
defining one or more of the following three options:
FLTK_SKIP_OPENGL, set to true to disable searching for opengl and
the FLTK GL library
FLTK_SKIP_FORMS, set to true to disable searching for fltk_forms
FLTK_SKIP_IMAGES, set to true to disable searching for fltk_images
FLTK_SKIP_FLUID, set to true if the fluid binary need not be present
at build time
The following variables will be defined:
FLTK_FOUND, True if all components not skipped were found
FLTK_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find include files
FLTK_LIBRARIES, list of fltk libraries you should link against
FLTK_FLUID_EXECUTABLE, where to find the Fluid tool
FLTK_WRAP_UI, This enables the FLTK_WRAP_UI command
The following cache variables are assigned but should not be
used. See the FLTK_LIBRARIES variable instead.
FLTK_BASE_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk.lib
FLTK_GL_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk_gl.lib
FLTK_FORMS_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk_forms.lib
FLTK_IMAGES_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk_images.lib
FindFLTK2
Find the native FLTK2 includes and library
The following settings are defined
FLTK2_FLUID_EXECUTABLE, where to find the Fluid tool
FLTK2_WRAP_UI, This enables the FLTK2_WRAP_UI command
FLTK2_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find include files
FLTK2_LIBRARIES, list of fltk2 libraries
FLTK2_FOUND, Don’t use FLTK2 if false.
The following settings should not be used in general.
FLTK2_BASE_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk2.lib
FLTK2_GL_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk2_gl.lib
FLTK2_IMAGES_LIBRARY = the full path to fltk2_images.lib
FindFreetype
Locate FreeType library
This module defines
FREETYPE_LIBRARIES, the library to link against
FREETYPE_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to FREETYPE
FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIRS, where to find headers.
This is the concatenation of the paths:
FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIR_ft2build
FREETYPE_INCLUDE_DIR_freetype2
$FREETYPE_DIR is an environment variable that would correspond
to the ./configure --prefix=$FREETYPE_DIR used in building
FREETYPE.
FindGCCXML
Find the GCC-XML front-end executable.
This module will define the following variables:
GCCXML - the GCC-XML front-end executable.
FindGDAL
Locate gdal
This module accepts the following environment variables:
GDAL_DIR or GDAL_ROOT - Specify the location of GDAL
This module defines the following CMake variables:
GDAL_FOUND - True if libgdal is found
GDAL_LIBRARY - A variable pointing to the GDAL library
GDAL_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
FindGIF
This module defines GIF_LIBRARIES - libraries to link to in
order to use GIF GIF_FOUND, if false, do not try to link
GIF_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the headers
$GIF_DIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$GIF_DIR
FindGLUT
try to find glut library and include files
GLUT_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find GL/glut.h, etc.
GLUT_LIBRARIES, the libraries to link against
GLUT_FOUND, If false, do not try to use GLUT.
Also defined, but not for general use are:
GLUT_glut_LIBRARY = the full path to the glut library.
GLUT_Xmu_LIBRARY = the full path to the Xmu library.
GLUT_Xi_LIBRARY = the full path to the Xi Library.
FindGTK
try to find GTK (and glib) and GTKGLArea
GTK_INCLUDE_DIR - Directories to include to use GTK
GTK_LIBRARIES - Files to link against to use GTK
GTK_FOUND - GTK was found
GTK_GL_FOUND - GTK’s GL features were found
FindGTK2
FindGTK2.cmake
This module can find the GTK2 widget libraries and several of
its other optional components like gtkmm, glade, and glademm.
NOTE: If you intend to use version checking, CMake 2.6.2 or
later is
required.
Specify one or more of the following components as you call this
find module. See example below.
gtk
gtkmm
glade
glademm
The following variables will be defined for your use
GTK2_FOUND - Were all of your specified components found?
GTK2_INCLUDE_DIRS - All include directories
GTK2_LIBRARIES - All libraries
GTK2_VERSION - The version of GTK2 found (x.y.z)
GTK2_MAJOR_VERSION - The major version of GTK2
GTK2_MINOR_VERSION - The minor version of GTK2
GTK2_PATCH_VERSION - The patch version of GTK2
Optional variables you can define prior to calling this module:
GTK2_DEBUG - Enables verbose debugging of the module
GTK2_SKIP_MARK_AS_ADVANCED - Disable marking cache variables as advanced
================= Example Usage:
Call find_package() once, here are some examples to pick from:
Require GTK 2.6 or later
find_package(GTK2 2.6 REQUIRED gtk)
Require GTK 2.10 or later and Glade
find_package(GTK2 2.10 REQUIRED gtk glade)
Search for GTK/GTKMM 2.8 or later
find_package(GTK2 2.8 COMPONENTS gtk gtkmm)
if(GTK2_FOUND)
include_directories(${GTK2_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(mygui mygui.cc)
target_link_libraries(mygui ${GTK2_LIBRARIES})
endif()
FindGTest
--------------------
Locate the Google C++ Testing Framework.
Defines the following variables:
GTEST_FOUND - Found the Google Testing framework
GTEST_INCLUDE_DIRS - Include directories
Also defines the library variables below as normal variables.
These contain debug/optimized keywords when a debugging library
is found.
GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES - Both libgtest & libgtest-main
GTEST_LIBRARIES - libgtest
GTEST_MAIN_LIBRARIES - libgtest-main
Accepts the following variables as input:
GTEST_ROOT - (as a CMake or environment variable)
The root directory of the gtest install prefix
GTEST_MSVC_SEARCH - If compiling with MSVC, this variable can be set to
"MD" or "MT" to enable searching a GTest build tree
(defaults: "MD")
Example Usage:
enable_testing()
find_package(GTest REQUIRED)
include_directories(${GTEST_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(foo foo.cc)
target_link_libraries(foo ${GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES})
add_test(AllTestsInFoo foo)
If you would like each Google test to show up in CTest as a test
you may use the following macro. NOTE: It will slow down your
tests by running an executable for each test and test fixture.
You will also have to rerun CMake after adding or removing tests
or test fixtures.
GTEST_ADD_TESTS(executable extra_args ARGN)
executable = The path to the test executable
extra_args = Pass a list of extra arguments to be passed to
executable enclosed in quotes (or "" for none)
ARGN = A list of source files to search for tests & test
fixtures.
Example:
set(FooTestArgs --foo 1 --bar 2)
add_executable(FooTest FooUnitTest.cc)
GTEST_ADD_TESTS(FooTest "${FooTestArgs}" FooUnitTest.cc)
FindGettext
Find GNU gettext tools
This module looks for the GNU gettext tools. This module defines
the following values:
GETTEXT_MSGMERGE_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the msgmerge tool.
GETTEXT_MSGFMT_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the msgfmt tool.
GETTEXT_FOUND: True if gettext has been found.
Additionally it provides the following macros:
GETTEXT_CREATE_TRANSLATIONS ( outputFile [ALL] file1 ... fileN )
This will create a target "translations" which will convert the
given input po files into the binary output mo file. If the
ALL option is used, the translations will also be created when
building the default target.
FindGit
The module defines the following variables:
GIT_EXECUTABLE - path to git command line client
GIT_FOUND - true if the command line client was found
Example usage:
find_package(Git)
if(GIT_FOUND)
message("git found: ${GIT_EXECUTABLE}")
endif()
FindGnuTLS
Try to find the GNU Transport Layer Security library (gnutls)
Once done this will define
GNUTLS_FOUND - System has gnutls
GNUTLS_INCLUDE_DIR - The gnutls include directory
GNUTLS_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use gnutls
GNUTLS_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using gnutls
FindGnuplot
this module looks for gnuplot
Once done this will define
GNUPLOT_FOUND - system has Gnuplot
GNUPLOT_EXECUTABLE - the Gnuplot executable
FindHDF5
Find HDF5, a library for reading and writing self describing
array data.
This module invokes the HDF5 wrapper compiler that should be
installed alongside HDF5. Depending upon the HDF5
Configuration, the wrapper compiler is called either h5cc or
h5pcc. If this succeeds, the module will then call the compiler
with the -show argument to see what flags are used when
compiling an HDF5 client application.
The module will optionally accept the COMPONENTS argument. If
no COMPONENTS are specified, then the find module will default
to finding only the HDF5 C library. If one or more COMPONENTS
are specified, the module will attempt to find the language
bindings for the specified components. Currently, the only
valid components are C and CXX. The module does not yet support
finding the Fortran bindings. If the COMPONENTS argument is not
given, the module will attempt to find only the C bindings.
On UNIX systems, this module will read the variable
HDF5_USE_STATIC_LIBRARIES to determine whether or not to prefer
a static link to a dynamic link for HDF5 and all of it’s
dependencies. To use this feature, make sure that the
HDF5_USE_STATIC_LIBRARIES variable is set before the call to
find_package.
To provide the module with a hint about where to find your HDF5
installation, you can set the environment variable HDF5_ROOT.
The Find module will then look in this path when searching for
HDF5 executables, paths, and libraries.
In addition to finding the includes and libraries required to
compile an HDF5 client application, this module also makes an
effort to find tools that come with the HDF5 distribution that
may be useful for regression testing.
This module will define the following variables:
HDF5_INCLUDE_DIRS - Location of the hdf5 includes
HDF5_INCLUDE_DIR - Location of the hdf5 includes (deprecated)
HDF5_DEFINITIONS - Required compiler definitions for HDF5
HDF5_C_LIBRARIES - Required libraries for the HDF5 C bindings.
HDF5_CXX_LIBRARIES - Required libraries for the HDF5 C++ bindings
HDF5_LIBRARIES - Required libraries for all requested bindings
HDF5_FOUND - true if HDF5 was found on the system
HDF5_LIBRARY_DIRS - the full set of library directories
HDF5_IS_PARALLEL - Whether or not HDF5 was found with parallel IO support
HDF5_C_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE - the path to the HDF5 C wrapper compiler
HDF5_CXX_COMPILER_EXECUTABLE - the path to the HDF5 C++ wrapper compiler
HDF5_DIFF_EXECUTABLE - the path to the HDF5 dataset comparison tool
FindHSPELL
Try to find Hspell
Once done this will define
HSPELL_FOUND - system has Hspell
HSPELL_INCLUDE_DIR - the Hspell include directory
HSPELL_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use Hspell
HSPELL_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using Hspell
HSPELL_VERSION_STRING - The version of Hspell found (x.y)
HSPELL_MAJOR_VERSION - the major version of Hspell
HSPELL_MINOR_VERSION - The minor version of Hspell
FindHTMLHelp
This module looks for Microsoft HTML Help Compiler
It defines:
HTML_HELP_COMPILER : full path to the Compiler (hhc.exe)
HTML_HELP_INCLUDE_PATH : include path to the API (htmlhelp.h)
HTML_HELP_LIBRARY : full path to the library (htmlhelp.lib)
FindITK
Find an ITK installation or build tree.
FindImageMagick
Find the ImageMagick binary suite.
This module will search for a set of ImageMagick tools specified
as components in the FIND_PACKAGE call. Typical components
include, but are not limited to (future versions of ImageMagick
might have additional components not listed here):
animate
compare
composite
conjure
convert
display
identify
import
mogrify
montage
stream
If no component is specified in the FIND_PACKAGE call, then it
only searches for the ImageMagick executable directory. This
code defines the following variables:
ImageMagick_FOUND - TRUE if all components are found.
ImageMagick_EXECUTABLE_DIR - Full path to executables directory.
ImageMagick_<component>_FOUND - TRUE if <component> is found.
ImageMagick_<component>_EXECUTABLE - Full path to <component> executable.
There are also components for the following ImageMagick APIs:
Magick++
MagickWand
MagickCore
For these components the following variables are set:
ImageMagick_FOUND - TRUE if all components are found.
ImageMagick_INCLUDE_DIRS - Full paths to all include dirs.
ImageMagick_LIBRARIES - Full paths to all libraries.
ImageMagick_<component>_FOUND - TRUE if <component> is found.
ImageMagick_<component>_INCLUDE_DIRS - Full path to <component> include dirs.
ImageMagick_<component>_LIBRARIES - Full path to <component> libraries.
Example Usages:
FIND_PACKAGE(ImageMagick)
FIND_PACKAGE(ImageMagick COMPONENTS convert)
FIND_PACKAGE(ImageMagick COMPONENTS convert mogrify display)
FIND_PACKAGE(ImageMagick COMPONENTS Magick++)
FIND_PACKAGE(ImageMagick COMPONENTS Magick++ convert)
Note that the standard FIND_PACKAGE features are supported
(i.e., QUIET, REQUIRED, etc.).
FindJNI
Find JNI java libraries.
This module finds if Java is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
JNI_INCLUDE_DIRS = the include dirs to use
JNI_LIBRARIES = the libraries to use
JNI_FOUND = TRUE if JNI headers and libraries were found.
JAVA_AWT_LIBRARY = the path to the jawt library
JAVA_JVM_LIBRARY = the path to the jvm library
JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH = the include path to jni.h
JAVA_INCLUDE_PATH2 = the include path to jni_md.h
JAVA_AWT_INCLUDE_PATH = the include path to jawt.h
FindJPEG
Find JPEG
Find the native JPEG includes and library This module defines
JPEG_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find jpeglib.h, etc.
JPEG_LIBRARIES, the libraries needed to use JPEG.
JPEG_FOUND, If false, do not try to use JPEG.
also defined, but not for general use are
JPEG_LIBRARY, where to find the JPEG library.
FindJasper
Try to find the Jasper JPEG2000 library
Once done this will define
JASPER_FOUND - system has Jasper
JASPER_INCLUDE_DIR - the Jasper include directory
JASPER_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use Jasper
FindJava
Find Java
This module finds if Java is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. This code sets the following
variables:
Java_JAVA_EXECUTABLE = the full path to the Java runtime
Java_JAVAC_EXECUTABLE = the full path to the Java compiler
Java_JAR_EXECUTABLE = the full path to the Java archiver
Java_VERSION_STRING = Version of the package found (java version), eg. 1.6.0_12
Java_VERSION_MAJOR = The major version of the package found.
Java_VERSION_MINOR = The minor version of the package found.
Java_VERSION_PATCH = The patch version of the package found.
Java_VERSION_TWEAK = The tweak version of the package found (after ’_’)
Java_VERSION = This is set to: $major.$minor.$patch(.$tweak)
NOTE: ${Java_VERSION} and ${Java_VERSION_STRING} are not
guaranteed to be identical. For example some java version may
return: Java_VERSION_STRING = 1.5.0_17 and Java_VERSION =
1.5.0.17
another example is the Java OEM, with: Java_VERSION_STRING =
1.6.0-oem and Java_VERSION = 1.6.0
For these components the following variables are set:
Java_FOUND - TRUE if all components are found.
Java_INCLUDE_DIRS - Full paths to all include dirs.
Java_LIBRARIES - Full paths to all libraries.
Java_<component>_FOUND - TRUE if <component> is found.
Example Usages:
FIND_PACKAGE(Java)
FIND_PACKAGE(Java COMPONENTS Runtime)
FIND_PACKAGE(Java COMPONENTS Development)
FindKDE3
Find the KDE3 include and library dirs, KDE preprocessors and
define a some macros
This module defines the following variables:
KDE3_DEFINITIONS - compiler definitions required for compiling KDE software
KDE3_INCLUDE_DIR - the KDE include directory
KDE3_INCLUDE_DIRS - the KDE and the Qt include directory, for use with INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES()
KDE3_LIB_DIR - the directory where the KDE libraries are installed, for use with LINK_DIRECTORIES()
QT_AND_KDECORE_LIBS - this contains both the Qt and the kdecore library
KDE3_DCOPIDL_EXECUTABLE - the dcopidl executable
KDE3_DCOPIDL2CPP_EXECUTABLE - the dcopidl2cpp executable
KDE3_KCFGC_EXECUTABLE - the kconfig_compiler executable
KDE3_FOUND - set to TRUE if all of the above has been found
The following user adjustable options are provided:
KDE3_BUILD_TESTS - enable this to build KDE testcases
It also adds the following macros (from KDE3Macros.cmake)
SRCS_VAR is always the variable which contains the list of
source files for your application or library.
KDE3_AUTOMOC(file1 ... fileN)
Call this if you want to have automatic moc file handling.
This means if you include "foo.moc" in the source file foo.cpp
a moc file for the header foo.h will be created automatically.
You can set the property SKIP_AUTOMAKE using SET_SOURCE_FILES_PROPERTIES()
to exclude some files in the list from being processed.
KDE3_ADD_MOC_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1 ... fileN )
If you don’t use the KDE3_AUTOMOC() macro, for the files
listed here moc files will be created (named "foo.moc.cpp")
KDE3_ADD_DCOP_SKELS(SRCS_VAR header1.h ... headerN.h )
Use this to generate DCOP skeletions from the listed headers.
KDE3_ADD_DCOP_STUBS(SRCS_VAR header1.h ... headerN.h )
Use this to generate DCOP stubs from the listed headers.
KDE3_ADD_UI_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1.ui ... fileN.ui )
Use this to add the Qt designer ui files to your application/library.
KDE3_ADD_KCFG_FILES(SRCS_VAR file1.kcfgc ... fileN.kcfgc )
Use this to add KDE kconfig compiler files to your application/library.
KDE3_INSTALL_LIBTOOL_FILE(target)
This will create and install a simple libtool file for the given target.
KDE3_ADD_EXECUTABLE(name file1 ... fileN )
Currently identical to ADD_EXECUTABLE(), may provide some advanced features in the future.
KDE3_ADD_KPART(name [WITH_PREFIX] file1 ... fileN )
Create a KDE plugin (KPart, kioslave, etc.) from the given source files.
If WITH_PREFIX is given, the resulting plugin will have the prefix "lib", otherwise it won’t.
It creates and installs an appropriate libtool la-file.
KDE3_ADD_KDEINIT_EXECUTABLE(name file1 ... fileN )
Create a KDE application in the form of a module loadable via kdeinit.
A library named kdeinit_<name> will be created and a small executable which links to it.
The option KDE3_ENABLE_FINAL to enable all-in-one compilation is
no longer supported.
Author: Alexander Neundorf <neundorf@kde.org>
FindKDE4
Find KDE4 and provide all necessary variables and macros to
compile software for it. It looks for KDE 4 in the following
directories in the given order:
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
KDEDIRS
/opt/kde4
Please look in FindKDE4Internal.cmake and KDE4Macros.cmake for
more information. They are installed with the KDE 4 libraries in
$KDEDIRS/share/apps/cmake/modules/.
Author: Alexander Neundorf <neundorf@kde.org>
FindLAPACK
Find LAPACK library
This module finds an installed fortran library that implements
the LAPACK linear-algebra interface (see
http://www.netlib.org/lapack/).
The approach follows that taken for the autoconf macro file,
acx_lapack.m4 (distributed at
http://ac-archive.sourceforge.net/ac-archive/acx_lapack.html).
This module sets the following variables:
LAPACK_FOUND - set to true if a library implementing the LAPACK interface
is found
LAPACK_LINKER_FLAGS - uncached list of required linker flags (excluding -l
and -L).
LAPACK_LIBRARIES - uncached list of libraries (using full path name) to
link against to use LAPACK
LAPACK95_LIBRARIES - uncached list of libraries (using full path name) to
link against to use LAPACK95
LAPACK95_FOUND - set to true if a library implementing the LAPACK f95
interface is found
BLA_STATIC if set on this determines what kind of linkage we do (static)
BLA_VENDOR if set checks only the specified vendor, if not set checks
all the possibilities
BLA_F95 if set on tries to find the f95 interfaces for BLAS/LAPACK
## List of vendors (BLA_VENDOR) valid in this module #
Intel(mkl), ACML,Apple, NAS, Generic
FindLATEX
Find Latex
This module finds if Latex is installed and determines where the
executables are. This code sets the following variables:
LATEX_COMPILER: path to the LaTeX compiler
PDFLATEX_COMPILER: path to the PdfLaTeX compiler
BIBTEX_COMPILER: path to the BibTeX compiler
MAKEINDEX_COMPILER: path to the MakeIndex compiler
DVIPS_CONVERTER: path to the DVIPS converter
PS2PDF_CONVERTER: path to the PS2PDF converter
LATEX2HTML_CONVERTER: path to the LaTeX2Html converter
FindLibXml2
Try to find the LibXml2 xml processing library
Once done this will define
LIBXML2_FOUND - System has LibXml2
LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR - The LibXml2 include directory
LIBXML2_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use LibXml2
LIBXML2_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using LibXml2
LIBXML2_XMLLINT_EXECUTABLE - The XML checking tool xmllint coming with LibXml2
FindLibXslt
Try to find the LibXslt library
Once done this will define
LIBXSLT_FOUND - system has LibXslt
LIBXSLT_INCLUDE_DIR - the LibXslt include directory
LIBXSLT_LIBRARIES - Link these to LibXslt
LIBXSLT_DEFINITIONS - Compiler switches required for using LibXslt
FindLua50
Locate Lua library This module defines
LUA50_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to Lua
LUA_LIBRARIES, both lua and lualib
LUA_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find lua.h and lualib.h (and probably lauxlib.h)
Note that the expected include convention is
#include "lua.h"
and not
#include <lua/lua.h>
This is because, the lua location is not standardized and may
exist in locations other than lua/
FindLua51
Locate Lua library This module defines
LUA51_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to Lua
LUA_LIBRARIES
LUA_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find lua.h
Note that the expected include convention is
#include "lua.h"
and not
#include <lua/lua.h>
This is because, the lua location is not standardized and may
exist in locations other than lua/
FindMFC
Find MFC on Windows
Find the native MFC - i.e. decide if an application can link to
the MFC libraries.
MFC_FOUND - Was MFC support found
You don’t need to include anything or link anything to use it.
FindMPEG
Find the native MPEG includes and library
This module defines
MPEG_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find MPEG.h, etc.
MPEG_LIBRARIES, the libraries required to use MPEG.
MPEG_FOUND, If false, do not try to use MPEG.
also defined, but not for general use are
MPEG_mpeg2_LIBRARY, where to find the MPEG library.
MPEG_vo_LIBRARY, where to find the vo library.
FindMPEG2
Find the native MPEG2 includes and library
This module defines
MPEG2_INCLUDE_DIR, path to mpeg2dec/mpeg2.h, etc.
MPEG2_LIBRARIES, the libraries required to use MPEG2.
MPEG2_FOUND, If false, do not try to use MPEG2.
also defined, but not for general use are
MPEG2_mpeg2_LIBRARY, where to find the MPEG2 library.
MPEG2_vo_LIBRARY, where to find the vo library.
FindMPI
Message Passing Interface (MPI) module.
The Message Passing Interface (MPI) is a library used to write
high-performance parallel applications that use message passing,
and is typically deployed on a cluster. MPI is a standard
interface (defined by the MPI forum) for which many
implementations are available. All of these implementations have
somewhat different compilation approaches (different include
paths, libraries to link against, etc.), and this module tries
to smooth out those differences.
This module will set the following variables:
MPI_FOUND TRUE if we have found MPI
MPI_COMPILE_FLAGS Compilation flags for MPI programs
MPI_INCLUDE_PATH Include path(s) for MPI header
MPI_LINK_FLAGS Linking flags for MPI programs
MPI_LIBRARY First MPI library to link against (cached)
MPI_EXTRA_LIBRARY Extra MPI libraries to link against (cached)
MPI_LIBRARIES All libraries to link MPI programs against
MPIEXEC Executable for running MPI programs
MPIEXEC_NUMPROC_FLAG Flag to pass to MPIEXEC before giving it the
number of processors to run on
MPIEXEC_PREFLAGS Flags to pass to MPIEXEC directly before the
executable to run.
MPIEXEC_POSTFLAGS Flags to pass to MPIEXEC after all other flags.
This module will attempt to auto-detect these settings, first by
looking for a MPI compiler, which many MPI implementations
provide as a pass-through to the native compiler to simplify the
compilation of MPI programs. The MPI compiler is stored in the
cache variable MPI_COMPILER, and will attempt to look for
commonly-named drivers mpic++, mpicxx, mpiCC, or mpicc. If the
compiler driver is found and recognized, it will be used to set
all of the module variables. To skip this auto-detection, set
MPI_LIBRARY and MPI_INCLUDE_PATH in the CMake cache.
If no compiler driver is found or the compiler driver is not
recognized, this module will then search for common include
paths and library names to try to detect MPI.
If CMake initially finds a different MPI than was intended, and
you want to use the MPI compiler auto-detection for a different
MPI implementation, set MPI_COMPILER to the MPI compiler driver
you want to use (e.g., mpicxx) and then set MPI_LIBRARY to the
string MPI_LIBRARY-NOTFOUND. When you re-configure,
auto-detection of MPI will run again with the newly-specified
MPI_COMPILER.
When using MPIEXEC to execute MPI applications, you should
typically use all of the MPIEXEC flags as follows:
${MPIEXEC} ${MPIEXEC_NUMPROC_FLAG} PROCS ${MPIEXEC_PREFLAGS} EXECUTABLE
${MPIEXEC_POSTFLAGS} ARGS
where PROCS is the number of processors on which to execute the
program, EXECUTABLE is the MPI program, and ARGS are the
arguments to pass to the MPI program.
FindMatlab
this module looks for Matlab
Defines:
MATLAB_INCLUDE_DIR: include path for mex.h, engine.h
MATLAB_LIBRARIES: required libraries: libmex, etc
MATLAB_MEX_LIBRARY: path to libmex.lib
MATLAB_MX_LIBRARY: path to libmx.lib
MATLAB_ENG_LIBRARY: path to libeng.lib
FindMotif
Try to find Motif (or lesstif)
Once done this will define:
MOTIF_FOUND - system has MOTIF
MOTIF_INCLUDE_DIR - include paths to use Motif
MOTIF_LIBRARIES - Link these to use Motif
FindOpenAL
Locate OpenAL This module defines OPENAL_LIBRARY OPENAL_FOUND,
if false, do not try to link to OpenAL OPENAL_INCLUDE_DIR,
where to find the headers
$OPENALDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to
the ./configure --prefix=$OPENALDIR used in building OpenAL.
Created by Eric Wing. This was influenced by the FindSDL.cmake
module.
FindOpenGL
Try to find OpenGL
Once done this will define
OPENGL_FOUND - system has OpenGL
OPENGL_XMESA_FOUND - system has XMESA
OPENGL_GLU_FOUND - system has GLU
OPENGL_INCLUDE_DIR - the GL include directory
OPENGL_LIBRARIES - Link these to use OpenGL and GLU
If you want to use just GL you can use these values
OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY - Path to OpenGL Library
OPENGL_glu_LIBRARY - Path to GLU Library
On OSX default to using the framework version of opengl People
will have to change the cache values of OPENGL_glu_LIBRARY and
OPENGL_gl_LIBRARY to use OpenGL with X11 on OSX
FindOpenMP
Finds OpenMP support
This module can be used to detect OpenMP support in a compiler.
If the compiler supports OpenMP, the flags required to compile
with openmp support are set.
The following variables are set:
OpenMP_C_FLAGS - flags to add to the C compiler for OpenMP support
OpenMP_CXX_FLAGS - flags to add to the CXX compiler for OpenMP support
OPENMP_FOUND - true if openmp is detected
Supported compilers can be found at
http://openmp.org/wp/openmp-compilers/
FindOpenSSL
Try to find the OpenSSL encryption library
Once done this will define
OPENSSL_ROOT_DIR - Set this variable to the root installation of OpenSSL
Read-Only variables:
OPENSSL_FOUND - system has the OpenSSL library
OPENSSL_INCLUDE_DIR - the OpenSSL include directory
OPENSSL_LIBRARIES - The libraries needed to use OpenSSL
FindOpenSceneGraph
Find OpenSceneGraph
This module searches for the OpenSceneGraph core "osg" library
as well as OpenThreads, and whatever additional COMPONENTS
(nodekits) that you specify.
See http://www.openscenegraph.org
NOTE: To use this module effectively you must either require
CMake >= 2.6.3 with cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.6.3) or
download and place FindOpenThreads.cmake,
Findosg_functions.cmake, Findosg.cmake, and Find<etc>.cmake
files into your CMAKE_MODULE_PATH.
==================================
This module accepts the following variables (note mixed case)
OpenSceneGraph_DEBUG - Enable debugging output
OpenSceneGraph_MARK_AS_ADVANCED - Mark cache variables as advanced
automatically
The following environment variables are also respected for
finding the OSG and it’s various components. CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
can also be used for this (see find_library() CMake
documentation).
<MODULE>_DIR (where MODULE is of the form "OSGVOLUME" and there is a FindosgVolume.cmake file)
OSG_DIR
OSGDIR
OSG_ROOT
This module defines the following output variables:
OPENSCENEGRAPH_FOUND - Was the OSG and all of the specified components found?
OPENSCENEGRAPH_VERSION - The version of the OSG which was found
OPENSCENEGRAPH_INCLUDE_DIRS - Where to find the headers
OPENSCENEGRAPH_LIBRARIES - The OSG libraries
================================== Example Usage:
find_package(OpenSceneGraph 2.0.0 REQUIRED osgDB osgUtil)
# libOpenThreads & libosg automatically searched
include_directories(${OPENSCENEGRAPH_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(foo foo.cc)
target_link_libraries(foo ${OPENSCENEGRAPH_LIBRARIES})
FindOpenThreads
OpenThreads is a C++ based threading library. Its largest
userbase seems to OpenSceneGraph so you might notice I accept
OSGDIR as an environment path. I consider this part of the
Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph components. Each
component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
Locate OpenThreads This module defines OPENTHREADS_LIBRARY
OPENTHREADS_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to OpenThreads
OPENTHREADS_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the headers
$OPENTHREADS_DIR is an environment variable that would
correspond to the ./configure --prefix=$OPENTHREADS_DIR used in
building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindPHP4
Find PHP4
This module finds if PHP4 is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
PHP4_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where php.h can be found
PHP4_EXECUTABLE = full path to the php4 binary
FindPNG
Find the native PNG includes and library
This module defines
PNG_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find png.h, etc.
PNG_LIBRARIES, the libraries to link against to use PNG.
PNG_DEFINITIONS - You should add_definitons(${PNG_DEFINITIONS}) before compiling code that includes png library files.
PNG_FOUND, If false, do not try to use PNG.
also defined, but not for general use are
PNG_LIBRARY, where to find the PNG library.
None of the above will be defined unles zlib can be found. PNG
depends on Zlib
FindPackageHandleStandardArgs
FIND_PACKAGE_HANDLE_STANDARD_ARGS(NAME (DEFAULT_MSG|"Custom
failure message") VAR1 ... )
This macro is intended to be used in FindXXX.cmake modules files.
It handles the REQUIRED and QUIET argument to FIND_PACKAGE() and
it also sets the <UPPERCASED_NAME>_FOUND variable.
The package is found if all variables listed are TRUE.
Example:
FIND_PACKAGE_HANDLE_STANDARD_ARGS(LibXml2 DEFAULT_MSG LIBXML2_LIBRARIES LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR)
LibXml2 is considered to be found, if both LIBXML2_LIBRARIES and
LIBXML2_INCLUDE_DIR are valid. Then also LIBXML2_FOUND is set to TRUE.
If it is not found and REQUIRED was used, it fails with FATAL_ERROR,
independent whether QUIET was used or not.
If it is found, the location is reported using the VAR1 argument, so
here a message "Found LibXml2: /usr/lib/libxml2.so" will be printed out.
If the second argument is DEFAULT_MSG, the message in the failure case will
be "Could NOT find LibXml2", if you don’t like this message you can specify
your own custom failure message there.
FindPackageMessage
FIND_PACKAGE_MESSAGE(<name> "message for user" "find result
details")
This macro is intended to be used in FindXXX.cmake modules
files. It will print a message once for each unique find result.
This is useful for telling the user where a package was found.
The first argument specifies the name (XXX) of the package. The
second argument specifies the message to display. The third
argument lists details about the find result so that if they
change the message will be displayed again. The macro also obeys
the QUIET argument to the find_package command.
Example:
IF(X11_FOUND)
FIND_PACKAGE_MESSAGE(X11 "Found X11: ${X11_X11_LIB}"
"[${X11_X11_LIB}][${X11_INCLUDE_DIR}]")
ELSE(X11_FOUND)
...
ENDIF(X11_FOUND)
FindPerl
Find perl
this module looks for Perl
PERL_EXECUTABLE - the full path to perl
PERL_FOUND - If false, don’t attempt to use perl.
FindPerlLibs
Find Perl libraries
This module finds if PERL is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
PERLLIBS_FOUND = True if perl.h & libperl were found
PERL_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where perl.h is found
PERL_LIBRARY = path to libperl
PERL_EXECUTABLE = full path to the perl binary
The following variables are also available if needed
(introduced after CMake 2.6.4)
PERL_SITESEARCH = path to the sitesearch install dir
PERL_SITELIB = path to the sitelib install directory
PERL_VENDORARCH = path to the vendor arch install directory
PERL_VENDORLIB = path to the vendor lib install directory
PERL_ARCHLIB = path to the arch lib install directory
PERL_PRIVLIB = path to the priv lib install directory
PERL_EXTRA_C_FLAGS = Compilation flags used to build perl
FindPhysFS
Locate PhysFS library This module defines PHYSFS_LIBRARY, the
name of the library to link against PHYSFS_FOUND, if false, do
not try to link to PHYSFS PHYSFS_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find
physfs.h
$PHYSFSDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to
the ./configure --prefix=$PHYSFSDIR used in building PHYSFS.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindPike
Find Pike
This module finds if PIKE is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
PIKE_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where program.h is found
PIKE_EXECUTABLE = full path to the pike binary
FindPkgConfig
a pkg-config module for CMake
Usage:
pkg_check_modules(<PREFIX> [REQUIRED] [QUIET] <MODULE> [<MODULE>]*)
checks for all the given modules
pkg_search_module(<PREFIX> [REQUIRED] [QUIET] <MODULE> [<MODULE>]*)
checks for given modules and uses the first working one
When the ’REQUIRED’ argument was set, macros will fail with an
error when module(s) could not be found
When the ’QUIET’ argument is set, no status messages will be
printed.
It sets the following variables:
PKG_CONFIG_FOUND ... true if pkg-config works on the system
PKG_CONFIG_EXECUTABLE ... pathname of the pkg-config program
<PREFIX>_FOUND ... set to 1 if module(s) exist
For the following variables two sets of values exist; first one
is the common one and has the given PREFIX. The second set
contains flags which are given out when pkgconfig was called
with the ’--static’ option.
<XPREFIX>_LIBRARIES ... only the libraries (w/o the ’-l’)
<XPREFIX>_LIBRARY_DIRS ... the paths of the libraries (w/o the ’-L’)
<XPREFIX>_LDFLAGS ... all required linker flags
<XPREFIX>_LDFLAGS_OTHER ... all other linker flags
<XPREFIX>_INCLUDE_DIRS ... the ’-I’ preprocessor flags (w/o the ’-I’)
<XPREFIX>_CFLAGS ... all required cflags
<XPREFIX>_CFLAGS_OTHER ... the other compiler flags
<XPREFIX> = <PREFIX> for common case
<XPREFIX> = <PREFIX>_STATIC for static linking
There are some special variables whose prefix depends on the
count of given modules. When there is only one module, <PREFIX>
stays unchanged. When there are multiple modules, the prefix
will be changed to <PREFIX>_<MODNAME>:
<XPREFIX>_VERSION ... version of the module
<XPREFIX>_PREFIX ... prefix-directory of the module
<XPREFIX>_INCLUDEDIR ... include-dir of the module
<XPREFIX>_LIBDIR ... lib-dir of the module
<XPREFIX> = <PREFIX> when |MODULES| == 1, else
<XPREFIX> = <PREFIX>_<MODNAME>
A <MODULE> parameter can have the following formats:
{MODNAME} ... matches any version
{MODNAME}>={VERSION} ... at least version <VERSION> is required
{MODNAME}={VERSION} ... exactly version <VERSION> is required
{MODNAME}<={VERSION} ... modules must not be newer than <VERSION>
Examples
pkg_check_modules (GLIB2 glib-2.0)
pkg_check_modules (GLIB2 glib-2.0>=2.10)
requires at least version 2.10 of glib2 and defines e.g.
GLIB2_VERSION=2.10.3
pkg_check_modules (FOO glib-2.0>=2.10 gtk+-2.0)
requires both glib2 and gtk2, and defines e.g.
FOO_glib-2.0_VERSION=2.10.3
FOO_gtk+-2.0_VERSION=2.8.20
pkg_check_modules (XRENDER REQUIRED xrender)
defines e.g.:
XRENDER_LIBRARIES=Xrender;X11
XRENDER_STATIC_LIBRARIES=Xrender;X11;pthread;Xau;Xdmcp
pkg_search_module (BAR libxml-2.0 libxml2 libxml>=2)
FindProducer
Though Producer isn’t directly part of OpenSceneGraph, its
primary user is OSG so I consider this part of the Findosg*
suite used to find OpenSceneGraph components. You’ll notice
that I accept OSGDIR as an environment path.
Each component is separate and you must opt in to each module.
You must also opt into OpenGL (and OpenThreads?) as these
modules won’t do it for you. This is to allow you control over
your own system piece by piece in case you need to opt out of
certain components or change the Find behavior for a particular
module (perhaps because the default FindOpenGL.cmake module
doesn’t work with your system as an example). If you want to use
a more convenient module that includes everything, use the
FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate Producer This module defines PRODUCER_LIBRARY
PRODUCER_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to Producer
PRODUCER_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the headers
$PRODUCER_DIR is an environment variable that would correspond
to the ./configure --prefix=$PRODUCER_DIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindProtobuf
Locate and configure the Google Protocol Buffers library.
Defines the following variables:
PROTOBUF_FOUND - Found the Google Protocol Buffers library
PROTOBUF_INCLUDE_DIRS - Include directories for Google Protocol Buffers
PROTOBUF_LIBRARIES - The protobuf library
The following cache variables are also defined:
PROTOBUF_LIBRARY - The protobuf library
PROTOBUF_PROTOC_LIBRARY - The protoc library
PROTOBUF_INCLUDE_DIR - The include directory for protocol buffers
PROTOBUF_PROTOC_EXECUTABLE - The protoc compiler
====================================================================
Example:
find_package(Protobuf REQUIRED)
include_directories(${PROTOBUF_INCLUDE_DIRS})
include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
PROTOBUF_GENERATE_CPP(PROTO_SRCS PROTO_HDRS foo.proto)
add_executable(bar bar.cc ${PROTO_SRCS} ${PROTO_HDRS})
target_link_libraries(bar ${PROTOBUF_LIBRARY})
NOTE: You may need to link against pthreads, depending on the
platform.
====================================================================
PROTOBUF_GENERATE_CPP (public function)
SRCS = Variable to define with autogenerated
source files
HDRS = Variable to define with autogenerated
header files
ARGN = proto files
====================================================================
FindPythonInterp
Find python interpreter
This module finds if Python interpreter is installed and
determines where the executables are. This code sets the
following variables:
PYTHONINTERP_FOUND - Was the Python executable found
PYTHON_EXECUTABLE - path to the Python interpreter
FindPythonLibs
Find python libraries
This module finds if Python is installed and determines where
the include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
PYTHONLIBS_FOUND - have the Python libs been found
PYTHON_LIBRARIES - path to the python library
PYTHON_INCLUDE_PATH - path to where Python.h is found (deprecated)
PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS - path to where Python.h is found
PYTHON_DEBUG_LIBRARIES - path to the debug library
FindQt Searches for all installed versions of QT.
This should only be used if your project can work with multiple
versions of QT. If not, you should just directly use FindQt4 or
FindQt3. If multiple versions of QT are found on the machine,
then The user must set the option DESIRED_QT_VERSION to the
version they want to use. If only one version of qt is found on
the machine, then the DESIRED_QT_VERSION is set to that version
and the matching FindQt3 or FindQt4 module is included. Once
the user sets DESIRED_QT_VERSION, then the FindQt3 or FindQt4
module is included.
QT_REQUIRED if this is set to TRUE then if CMake can
not find QT4 or QT3 an error is raised
and a message is sent to the user.
DESIRED_QT_VERSION OPTION is created
QT4_INSTALLED is set to TRUE if qt4 is found.
QT3_INSTALLED is set to TRUE if qt3 is found.
FindQt3
Locate Qt include paths and libraries
This module defines:
QT_INCLUDE_DIR - where to find qt.h, etc.
QT_LIBRARIES - the libraries to link against to use Qt.
QT_DEFINITIONS - definitions to use when
compiling code that uses Qt.
QT_FOUND - If false, don’t try to use Qt.
If you need the multithreaded version of Qt, set QT_MT_REQUIRED
to TRUE
Also defined, but not for general use are:
QT_MOC_EXECUTABLE, where to find the moc tool.
QT_UIC_EXECUTABLE, where to find the uic tool.
QT_QT_LIBRARY, where to find the Qt library.
QT_QTMAIN_LIBRARY, where to find the qtmain
library. This is only required by Qt3 on Windows.
FindQt4
Find QT 4
This module can be used to find Qt4. The most important issue is
that the Qt4 qmake is available via the system path. This qmake
is then used to detect basically everything else. This module
defines a number of key variables and macros. The variable
QT_USE_FILE is set which is the path to a CMake file that can be
included to compile Qt 4 applications and libraries. It sets
up the compilation environment for include directories,
preprocessor defines and populates a QT_LIBRARIES variable.
Typical usage could be something like:
find_package(Qt4 4.4.3 COMPONENTS QtCore QtGui QtXml REQUIRED )
include(${QT_USE_FILE})
add_executable(myexe main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(myexe ${QT_LIBRARIES})
The minimum required version can be specified using the standard
find_package()-syntax (see example above). For compatibility
with older versions of FindQt4.cmake it is also possible to set
the variable QT_MIN_VERSION to the minimum required version of
Qt4 before the find_package(Qt4) command. If both are used,
the version used in the find_package() command overrides the one
from QT_MIN_VERSION.
When using the components argument, QT_USE_QT* variables are
automatically set for the QT_USE_FILE to pick up. If one wishes
to manually set them, the available ones to set include:
QT_DONT_USE_QTCORE
QT_DONT_USE_QTGUI
QT_USE_QT3SUPPORT
QT_USE_QTASSISTANT
QT_USE_QAXCONTAINER
QT_USE_QAXSERVER
QT_USE_QTDESIGNER
QT_USE_QTMOTIF
QT_USE_QTMAIN
QT_USE_QTMULTIMEDIA
QT_USE_QTNETWORK
QT_USE_QTNSPLUGIN
QT_USE_QTOPENGL
QT_USE_QTSQL
QT_USE_QTXML
QT_USE_QTSVG
QT_USE_QTTEST
QT_USE_QTUITOOLS
QT_USE_QTDBUS
QT_USE_QTSCRIPT
QT_USE_QTASSISTANTCLIENT
QT_USE_QTHELP
QT_USE_QTWEBKIT
QT_USE_QTXMLPATTERNS
QT_USE_PHONON
QT_USE_QTSCRIPTTOOLS
QT_USE_QTDECLARATIVE
QT_USE_IMPORTED_TARGETS
If this variable is set to TRUE, FindQt4.cmake will create imported
library targets for the various Qt libraries and set the
library variables like QT_QTCORE_LIBRARY to point at these imported
targets instead of the library file on disk. This provides much better
handling of the release and debug versions of the Qt libraries and is
also always backwards compatible, except for the case that dependencies
of libraries are exported, these will then also list the names of the
imported targets as dependency and not the file location on disk. This
is much more flexible, but requires that FindQt4.cmake is executed before
such an exported dependency file is processed.
There are also some files that need processing by some Qt tools
such as moc and uic. Listed below are macros that may be used
to process those files.
macro QT4_WRAP_CPP(outfiles inputfile ... OPTIONS ...)
create moc code from a list of files containing Qt class with
the Q_OBJECT declaration. Per-direcotry preprocessor definitions
are also added. Options may be given to moc, such as those found
when executing "moc -help".
macro QT4_WRAP_UI(outfiles inputfile ... OPTIONS ...)
create code from a list of Qt designer ui files.
Options may be given to uic, such as those found
when executing "uic -help"
macro QT4_ADD_RESOURCES(outfiles inputfile ... OPTIONS ...)
create code from a list of Qt resource files.
Options may be given to rcc, such as those found
when executing "rcc -help"
macro QT4_GENERATE_MOC(inputfile outputfile )
creates a rule to run moc on infile and create outfile.
Use this if for some reason QT4_WRAP_CPP() isn’t appropriate, e.g.
because you need a custom filename for the moc file or something similar.
macro QT4_AUTOMOC(sourcefile1 sourcefile2 ... )
This macro is still experimental.
It can be used to have moc automatically handled.
So if you have the files foo.h and foo.cpp, and in foo.h a
a class uses the Q_OBJECT macro, moc has to run on it. If you don’t
want to use QT4_WRAP_CPP() (which is reliable and mature), you can insert
#include "foo.moc"
in foo.cpp and then give foo.cpp as argument to QT4_AUTOMOC(). This will the
scan all listed files at cmake-time for such included moc files and if it finds
them cause a rule to be generated to run moc at build time on the
accompanying header file foo.h.
If a source file has the SKIP_AUTOMOC property set it will be ignored by this macro.
macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_INTERFACE(outfiles interface basename)
create a the interface header and implementation files with the
given basename from the given interface xml file and add it to
the list of sources
macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_INTERFACES(outfiles inputfile ... )
create the interface header and implementation files
for all listed interface xml files
the name will be automatically determined from the name of the xml file
macro QT4_ADD_DBUS_ADAPTOR(outfiles xmlfile parentheader parentclassname [basename] [classname])
create a dbus adaptor (header and implementation file) from the xml file
describing the interface, and add it to the list of sources. The adaptor
forwards the calls to a parent class, defined in parentheader and named
parentclassname. The name of the generated files will be
<basename>adaptor.{cpp,h} where basename defaults to the basename of the xml file.
If <classname> is provided, then it will be used as the classname of the
adaptor itself.
macro QT4_GENERATE_DBUS_INTERFACE( header [interfacename] OPTIONS ...)
generate the xml interface file from the given header.
If the optional argument interfacename is omitted, the name of the
interface file is constructed from the basename of the header with
the suffix .xml appended.
Options may be given to qdbuscpp2xml, such as those found when executing "qdbuscpp2xml --help"
macro QT4_CREATE_TRANSLATION( qm_files directories ... sources ...
ts_files ... OPTIONS ...)
out: qm_files
in: directories sources ts_files
options: flags to pass to lupdate, such as -extensions to specify
extensions for a directory scan.
generates commands to create .ts (vie lupdate) and .qm
(via lrelease) - files from directories and/or sources. The ts files are
created and/or updated in the source tree (unless given with full paths).
The qm files are generated in the build tree.
Updating the translations can be done by adding the qm_files
to the source list of your library/executable, so they are
always updated, or by adding a custom target to control when
they get updated/generated.
macro QT4_ADD_TRANSLATION( qm_files ts_files ... )
out: qm_files
in: ts_files
generates commands to create .qm from .ts - files. The generated
filenames can be found in qm_files. The ts_files
must exists and are not updated in any way.
Below is a detailed list of variables that FindQt4.cmake sets.
QT_FOUND If false, don’t try to use Qt.
QT4_FOUND If false, don’t try to use Qt 4.
QT_VERSION_MAJOR The major version of Qt found.
QT_VERSION_MINOR The minor version of Qt found.
QT_VERSION_PATCH The patch version of Qt found.
QT_EDITION Set to the edition of Qt (i.e. DesktopLight)
QT_EDITION_DESKTOPLIGHT True if QT_EDITION == DesktopLight
QT_QTCORE_FOUND True if QtCore was found.
QT_QTGUI_FOUND True if QtGui was found.
QT_QT3SUPPORT_FOUND True if Qt3Support was found.
QT_QTASSISTANT_FOUND True if QtAssistant was found.
QT_QTASSISTANTCLIENT_FOUND True if QtAssistantClient was found.
QT_QAXCONTAINER_FOUND True if QAxContainer was found (Windows only).
QT_QAXSERVER_FOUND True if QAxServer was found (Windows only).
QT_QTDBUS_FOUND True if QtDBus was found.
QT_QTDESIGNER_FOUND True if QtDesigner was found.
QT_QTDESIGNERCOMPONENTS True if QtDesignerComponents was found.
QT_QTHELP_FOUND True if QtHelp was found.
QT_QTMOTIF_FOUND True if QtMotif was found.
QT_QTMULTIMEDIA_FOUND True if QtMultimedia was found (since Qt 4.6.0).
QT_QTNETWORK_FOUND True if QtNetwork was found.
QT_QTNSPLUGIN_FOUND True if QtNsPlugin was found.
QT_QTOPENGL_FOUND True if QtOpenGL was found.
QT_QTSQL_FOUND True if QtSql was found.
QT_QTSVG_FOUND True if QtSvg was found.
QT_QTSCRIPT_FOUND True if QtScript was found.
QT_QTSCRIPTTOOLS_FOUND True if QtScriptTools was found.
QT_QTTEST_FOUND True if QtTest was found.
QT_QTUITOOLS_FOUND True if QtUiTools was found.
QT_QTWEBKIT_FOUND True if QtWebKit was found.
QT_QTXML_FOUND True if QtXml was found.
QT_QTXMLPATTERNS_FOUND True if QtXmlPatterns was found.
QT_PHONON_FOUND True if phonon was found.
QT_QTDECLARATIVE_FOUND True if QtDeclarative was found.
QT_MAC_USE_COCOA For Mac OS X, its whether Cocoa or Carbon is used.
In general, this should not be used, but its useful
when having platform specific code.
QT_DEFINITIONS Definitions to use when compiling code that uses Qt.
You do not need to use this if you include QT_USE_FILE.
The QT_USE_FILE will also define QT_DEBUG and QT_NO_DEBUG
to fit your current build type. Those are not contained
in QT_DEFINITIONS.
QT_INCLUDES List of paths to all include directories of
Qt4 QT_INCLUDE_DIR and QT_QTCORE_INCLUDE_DIR are
always in this variable even if NOTFOUND,
all other INCLUDE_DIRS are
only added if they are found.
You do not need to use this if you include QT_USE_FILE.
Include directories for the Qt modules are listed here.
You do not need to use these variables if you include QT_USE_FILE.
QT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include" of Qt4
QT_QT3SUPPORT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/Qt3Support"
QT_QTASSISTANT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtAssistant"
QT_QTASSISTANTCLIENT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtAssistant"
QT_QAXCONTAINER_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/ActiveQt" (Windows only)
QT_QAXSERVER_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/ActiveQt" (Windows only)
QT_QTCORE_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtCore"
QT_QTDBUS_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtDBus"
QT_QTDESIGNER_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtDesigner"
QT_QTDESIGNERCOMPONENTS_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtDesigner"
QT_QTGUI_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtGui"
QT_QTHELP_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtHelp"
QT_QTMOTIF_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtMotif"
QT_QTMULTIMEDIA_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtMultimedia"
QT_QTNETWORK_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtNetwork"
QT_QTNSPLUGIN_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtNsPlugin"
QT_QTOPENGL_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtOpenGL"
QT_QTSCRIPT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtScript"
QT_QTSQL_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtSql"
QT_QTSVG_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtSvg"
QT_QTTEST_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtTest"
QT_QTWEBKIT_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtWebKit"
QT_QTXML_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtXml"
QT_QTXMLPATTERNS_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtXmlPatterns"
QT_PHONON_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/phonon"
QT_QTSCRIPTTOOLS_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtScriptTools"
QT_QTDECLARATIVE_INCLUDE_DIR Path to "include/QtDeclarative"
QT_BINARY_DIR Path to "bin" of Qt4
QT_LIBRARY_DIR Path to "lib" of Qt4
QT_PLUGINS_DIR Path to "plugins" for Qt4
QT_TRANSLATIONS_DIR Path to "translations" of Qt4
QT_DOC_DIR Path to "doc" of Qt4
QT_MKSPECS_DIR Path to "mkspecs" of Qt4
The Qt toolkit may contain both debug and release libraries. In
that case, the following library variables will contain both.
You do not need to use these variables if you include
QT_USE_FILE, and use QT_LIBRARIES.
QT_QT3SUPPORT_LIBRARY The Qt3Support library
QT_QTASSISTANT_LIBRARY The QtAssistant library
QT_QTASSISTANTCLIENT_LIBRARY The QtAssistantClient library
QT_QAXCONTAINER_LIBRARY The QAxContainer library (Windows only)
QT_QAXSERVER_LIBRARY The QAxServer library (Windows only)
QT_QTCORE_LIBRARY The QtCore library
QT_QTDBUS_LIBRARY The QtDBus library
QT_QTDESIGNER_LIBRARY The QtDesigner library
QT_QTDESIGNERCOMPONENTS_LIBRARY The QtDesignerComponents library
QT_QTGUI_LIBRARY The QtGui library
QT_QTHELP_LIBRARY The QtHelp library
QT_QTMOTIF_LIBRARY The QtMotif library
QT_QTMULTIMEDIA_LIBRARY The QtMultimedia library
QT_QTNETWORK_LIBRARY The QtNetwork library
QT_QTNSPLUGIN_LIBRARY The QtNsPLugin library
QT_QTOPENGL_LIBRARY The QtOpenGL library
QT_QTSCRIPT_LIBRARY The QtScript library
QT_QTSQL_LIBRARY The QtSql library
QT_QTSVG_LIBRARY The QtSvg library
QT_QTTEST_LIBRARY The QtTest library
QT_QTUITOOLS_LIBRARY The QtUiTools library
QT_QTWEBKIT_LIBRARY The QtWebKit library
QT_QTXML_LIBRARY The QtXml library
QT_QTXMLPATTERNS_LIBRARY The QtXmlPatterns library
QT_QTMAIN_LIBRARY The qtmain library for Windows
QT_PHONON_LIBRARY The phonon library
QT_QTSCRIPTTOOLS_LIBRARY The QtScriptTools library
The QtDeclarative library: QT_QTDECLARATIVE_LIBRARY
also defined, but NOT for general use are
QT_MOC_EXECUTABLE Where to find the moc tool.
QT_UIC_EXECUTABLE Where to find the uic tool.
QT_UIC3_EXECUTABLE Where to find the uic3 tool.
QT_RCC_EXECUTABLE Where to find the rcc tool
QT_DBUSCPP2XML_EXECUTABLE Where to find the qdbuscpp2xml tool.
QT_DBUSXML2CPP_EXECUTABLE Where to find the qdbusxml2cpp tool.
QT_LUPDATE_EXECUTABLE Where to find the lupdate tool.
QT_LRELEASE_EXECUTABLE Where to find the lrelease tool.
QT_QCOLLECTIONGENERATOR_EXECUTABLE Where to find the qcollectiongenerator tool.
QT_DESIGNER_EXECUTABLE Where to find the Qt designer tool.
QT_LINGUIST_EXECUTABLE Where to find the Qt linguist tool.
These are around for backwards compatibility they will be set
QT_WRAP_CPP Set true if QT_MOC_EXECUTABLE is found
QT_WRAP_UI Set true if QT_UIC_EXECUTABLE is found
These variables do _NOT_ have any effect anymore (compared to
FindQt.cmake)
QT_MT_REQUIRED Qt4 is now always multithreaded
These variables are set to "" Because Qt structure changed
(They make no sense in Qt4)
QT_QT_LIBRARY Qt-Library is now split
FindQuickTime
Locate QuickTime This module defines QUICKTIME_LIBRARY
QUICKTIME_FOUND, if false, do not try to link to gdal
QUICKTIME_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the headers
$QUICKTIME_DIR is an environment variable that would correspond
to the ./configure --prefix=$QUICKTIME_DIR
Created by Eric Wing.
FindRTI
Try to find M&S HLA RTI libraries
This module finds if any HLA RTI is installed and locates the
standard RTI include files and libraries.
RTI is a simulation infrastructure standardized by IEEE and
SISO. It has a well defined C++ API that assures that simulation
applications are independent on a particular RTI implementation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run-Time_Infrastructure_(simulation)
This code sets the following variables:
RTI_INCLUDE_DIR = the directory where RTI includes file are found
RTI_LIBRARIES = The libraries to link against to use RTI
RTI_DEFINITIONS = -DRTI_USES_STD_FSTREAM
RTI_FOUND = Set to FALSE if any HLA RTI was not found
Report problems to <certi-devel@nongnu.org>
FindRuby
Find Ruby
This module finds if Ruby is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. Ruby 1.8 and 1.9 are supported.
The minimum required version specified in the find_package()
command is honored. It also determines what the name of the
library is. This code sets the following variables:
RUBY_EXECUTABLE = full path to the ruby binary
RUBY_INCLUDE_DIRS = include dirs to be used when using the ruby library
RUBY_LIBRARY = full path to the ruby library
RUBY_VERSION = the version of ruby which was found, e.g. "1.8.7"
RUBY_FOUND = set to true if ruby ws found successfully
RUBY_INCLUDE_PATH = same as RUBY_INCLUDE_DIRS, only provided for compatibility reasons, don’t use it
FindSDL
Locate SDL library This module defines SDL_LIBRARY, the name of
the library to link against SDL_FOUND, if false, do not try to
link to SDL SDL_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find SDL.h
This module responds to the the flag: SDL_BUILDING_LIBRARY If
this is defined, then no SDL_main will be linked in because
only applications need main(). Otherwise, it is assumed you are
building an application and this module will attempt to locate
and set the the proper link flags as part of the returned
SDL_LIBRARY variable.
Don’t forget to include SDLmain.h and SDLmain.m your project for
the OS X framework based version. (Other versions link to
-lSDLmain which this module will try to find on your behalf.)
Also for OS X, this module will automatically add the
-framework Cocoa on your behalf.
Additional Note: If you see an empty SDL_LIBRARY_TEMP in your
configuration and no SDL_LIBRARY, it means CMake did not find
your SDL library (SDL.dll, libsdl.so, SDL.framework, etc). Set
SDL_LIBRARY_TEMP to point to your SDL library, and configure
again. Similarly, if you see an empty SDLMAIN_LIBRARY, you
should set this value as appropriate. These values are used to
generate the final SDL_LIBRARY variable, but when these values
are unset, SDL_LIBRARY does not get created.
$SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL. l.e.galup
9-20-02
Modified by Eric Wing. Added code to assist with automated
building by using environmental variables and providing a more
controlled/consistent search behavior. Added new modifications
to recognize OS X frameworks and additional Unix paths
(FreeBSD, etc). Also corrected the header search path to follow
"proper" SDL guidelines. Added a search for SDLmain which is
needed by some platforms. Added a search for threads which is
needed by some platforms. Added needed compile switches for
MinGW.
On OSX, this will prefer the Framework version (if found) over
others. People will have to manually change the cache values of
SDL_LIBRARY to override this selection or set the CMake
environment CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH to modify the search paths.
Note that the header path has changed from SDL/SDL.h to just
SDL.h This needed to change because "proper" SDL convention is
#include "SDL.h", not <SDL/SDL.h>. This is done for portability
reasons because not all systems place things in SDL/ (see
FreeBSD).
FindSDL_image
Locate SDL_image library This module defines SDLIMAGE_LIBRARY,
the name of the library to link against SDLIMAGE_FOUND, if
false, do not try to link to SDL SDLIMAGE_INCLUDE_DIR, where to
find SDL/SDL.h
$SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.
Created by Eric Wing. This was influenced by the FindSDL.cmake
module, but with modifications to recognize OS X frameworks and
additional Unix paths (FreeBSD, etc).
FindSDL_mixer
Locate SDL_mixer library This module defines SDLMIXER_LIBRARY,
the name of the library to link against SDLMIXER_FOUND, if
false, do not try to link to SDL SDLMIXER_INCLUDE_DIR, where to
find SDL/SDL.h
$SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.
Created by Eric Wing. This was influenced by the FindSDL.cmake
module, but with modifications to recognize OS X frameworks and
additional Unix paths (FreeBSD, etc).
FindSDL_net
Locate SDL_net library This module defines SDLNET_LIBRARY, the
name of the library to link against SDLNET_FOUND, if false, do
not try to link against SDLNET_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find the
headers
$SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.
Created by Eric Wing. This was influenced by the FindSDL.cmake
module, but with modifications to recognize OS X frameworks and
additional Unix paths (FreeBSD, etc).
FindSDL_sound
Locates the SDL_sound library
FindSDL_ttf
Locate SDL_ttf library This module defines SDLTTF_LIBRARY, the
name of the library to link against SDLTTF_FOUND, if false, do
not try to link to SDL SDLTTF_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find
SDL/SDL.h
$SDLDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$SDLDIR used in building SDL.
Created by Eric Wing. This was influenced by the FindSDL.cmake
module, but with modifications to recognize OS X frameworks and
additional Unix paths (FreeBSD, etc).
FindSWIG
Find SWIG
This module finds an installed SWIG. It sets the following
variables:
SWIG_FOUND - set to true if SWIG is found
SWIG_DIR - the directory where swig is installed
SWIG_EXECUTABLE - the path to the swig executable
SWIG_VERSION - the version number of the swig executable
All information is collected from the SWIG_EXECUTABLE so the
version to be found can be changed from the command line by
means of setting SWIG_EXECUTABLE
FindSelfPackers
Find upx
This module looks for some executable packers (i.e. softwares
that compress executables or shared libs into on-the-fly
self-extracting executables or shared libs. Examples:
UPX: http://wildsau.idv.uni-linz.ac.at/mfx/upx.html
FindSquish
-- Typical Use
This module can be used to find Squish (currently support is
aimed at version 3).
SQUISH_FOUND If false, don’t try to use Squish
SQUISH_VERSION_MAJOR The major version of Squish found
SQUISH_VERSION_MINOR The minor version of Squish found
SQUISH_VERSION_PATCH The patch version of Squish found
SQUISH_INSTALL_DIR The Squish installation directory (containing bin, lib, etc)
SQUISH_SERVER_EXECUTABLE The squishserver executable
SQUISH_CLIENT_EXECUTABLE The squishrunner executable
SQUISH_INSTALL_DIR_FOUND Was the install directory found?
SQUISH_SERVER_EXECUTABLE_FOUND Was the server executable found?
SQUISH_CLIENT_EXECUTABLE_FOUND Was the client executable found?
macro SQUISH_ADD_TEST(testName applicationUnderTest testSuite
testCase)
ENABLE_TESTING()
FIND_PACKAGE(Squish)
IF (SQUISH_FOUND)
SQUISH_ADD_TEST(myTestName myApplication testSuiteName testCaseName)
ENDIF (SQUISH_FOUND)
FindSubversion
Extract information from a subversion working copy
The module defines the following variables:
Subversion_SVN_EXECUTABLE - path to svn command line client
Subversion_VERSION_SVN - version of svn command line client
Subversion_FOUND - true if the command line client was found
If the command line client executable is found the macro
Subversion_WC_INFO(<dir> <var-prefix>)
is defined to extract information of a subversion working copy
at a given location. The macro defines the following variables:
<var-prefix>_WC_URL - url of the repository (at <dir>)
<var-prefix>_WC_ROOT - root url of the repository
<var-prefix>_WC_REVISION - current revision
<var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_AUTHOR - author of last commit
<var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_DATE - date of last commit
<var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_REV - revision of last commit
<var-prefix>_WC_LAST_CHANGED_LOG - last log of base revision
<var-prefix>_WC_INFO - output of command ‘svn info <dir>’
Example usage:
FIND_PACKAGE(Subversion)
IF(Subversion_FOUND)
Subversion_WC_INFO(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR} Project)
MESSAGE("Current revision is ${Project_WC_REVISION}")
Subversion_WC_LOG(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR} Project)
MESSAGE("Last changed log is ${Project_LAST_CHANGED_LOG}")
ENDIF(Subversion_FOUND)
FindTCL
TK_INTERNAL_PATH was removed.
This module finds if Tcl is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
TCL_FOUND = Tcl was found
TK_FOUND = Tk was found
TCLTK_FOUND = Tcl and Tk were found
TCL_LIBRARY = path to Tcl library (tcl tcl80)
TCL_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where tcl.h can be found
TCL_TCLSH = path to tclsh binary (tcl tcl80)
TK_LIBRARY = path to Tk library (tk tk80 etc)
TK_INCLUDE_PATH = path to where tk.h can be found
TK_WISH = full path to the wish executable
In an effort to remove some clutter and clear up some issues for
people who are not necessarily Tcl/Tk gurus/developpers, some
variables were moved or removed. Changes compared to CMake 2.4
are:
=> they were only useful for people writing Tcl/Tk extensions.
=> these libs are not packaged by default with Tcl/Tk distributions.
Even when Tcl/Tk is built from source, several flavors of debug libs
are created and there is no real reason to pick a single one
specifically (say, amongst tcl84g, tcl84gs, or tcl84sgx).
Let’s leave that choice to the user by allowing him to assign
TCL_LIBRARY to any Tcl library, debug or not.
=> this ended up being only a Win32 variable, and there is a lot of
confusion regarding the location of this file in an installed Tcl/Tk
tree anyway (see 8.5 for example). If you need the internal path at
this point it is safer you ask directly where the *source* tree is
and dig from there.
FindTIFF
Find TIFF library
Find the native TIFF includes and library This module defines
TIFF_INCLUDE_DIR, where to find tiff.h, etc.
TIFF_LIBRARIES, libraries to link against to use TIFF.
TIFF_FOUND, If false, do not try to use TIFF.
also defined, but not for general use are
TIFF_LIBRARY, where to find the TIFF library.
FindTclStub
TCL_STUB_LIBRARY_DEBUG and TK_STUB_LIBRARY_DEBUG were removed.
This module finds Tcl stub libraries. It first finds Tcl include
files and libraries by calling FindTCL.cmake. How to Use the Tcl
Stubs Library:
http://tcl.activestate.com/doc/howto/stubs.html
Using Stub Libraries:
http://safari.oreilly.com/0130385603/ch48lev1sec3
This code sets the following variables:
TCL_STUB_LIBRARY = path to Tcl stub library
TK_STUB_LIBRARY = path to Tk stub library
TTK_STUB_LIBRARY = path to ttk stub library
In an effort to remove some clutter and clear up some issues for
people who are not necessarily Tcl/Tk gurus/developpers, some
variables were moved or removed. Changes compared to CMake 2.4
are:
=> these libs are not packaged by default with Tcl/Tk distributions.
Even when Tcl/Tk is built from source, several flavors of debug libs
are created and there is no real reason to pick a single one
specifically (say, amongst tclstub84g, tclstub84gs, or tclstub84sgx).
Let’s leave that choice to the user by allowing him to assign
TCL_STUB_LIBRARY to any Tcl library, debug or not.
FindTclsh
Find tclsh
This module finds if TCL is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
TCLSH_FOUND = TRUE if tclsh has been found
TCL_TCLSH = the path to the tclsh executable
In cygwin, look for the cygwin version first. Don’t look for it
later to avoid finding the cygwin version on a Win32 build.
FindThreads
This module determines the thread library of the system.
The following variables are set
CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT - the thread library
CMAKE_USE_SPROC_INIT - are we using sproc?
CMAKE_USE_WIN32_THREADS_INIT - using WIN32 threads?
CMAKE_USE_PTHREADS_INIT - are we using pthreads
CMAKE_HP_PTHREADS_INIT - are we using hp pthreads
For systems with multiple thread libraries, caller can set
CMAKE_THREAD_PREFER_PTHREADS
FindUnixCommands
Find unix commands from cygwin
This module looks for some usual Unix commands.
FindVTK
Find a VTK installation or build tree.
The following variables are set if VTK is found. If VTK is not
found, VTK_FOUND is set to false.
VTK_FOUND - Set to true when VTK is found.
VTK_USE_FILE - CMake file to use VTK.
VTK_MAJOR_VERSION - The VTK major version number.
VTK_MINOR_VERSION - The VTK minor version number
(odd non-release).
VTK_BUILD_VERSION - The VTK patch level
(meaningless for odd minor).
VTK_INCLUDE_DIRS - Include directories for VTK
VTK_LIBRARY_DIRS - Link directories for VTK libraries
VTK_KITS - List of VTK kits, in CAPS
(COMMON,IO,) etc.
VTK_LANGUAGES - List of wrapped languages, in CAPS
(TCL, PYHTON,) etc.
The following cache entries must be set by the user to locate
VTK:
VTK_DIR - The directory containing VTKConfig.cmake.
This is either the root of the build tree,
or the lib/vtk directory. This is the
only cache entry.
The following variables are set for backward compatibility and
should not be used in new code:
USE_VTK_FILE - The full path to the UseVTK.cmake file.
This is provided for backward
compatibility. Use VTK_USE_FILE
instead.
FindWget
Find wget
This module looks for wget. This module defines the following
values:
WGET_EXECUTABLE: the full path to the wget tool.
WGET_FOUND: True if wget has been found.
FindWish
Find wish installation
This module finds if TCL is installed and determines where the
include files and libraries are. It also determines what the
name of the library is. This code sets the following variables:
TK_WISH = the path to the wish executable
if UNIX is defined, then it will look for the cygwin version
first
FindX11
Find X11 installation
Try to find X11 on UNIX systems. The following values are
defined
X11_FOUND - True if X11 is available
X11_INCLUDE_DIR - include directories to use X11
X11_LIBRARIES - link against these to use X11
and also the following more fine grained variables: Include
paths: X11_ICE_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_ICE_LIB,
X11_ICE_FOUND
X11_X11_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_X11_LIB
X11_Xaccessrules_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xaccess_FOUND
X11_Xaccessstr_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xaccess_FOUND
X11_Xau_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xau_LIB, X11_Xau_FOUND
X11_Xcomposite_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xcomposite_LIB, X11_Xcomposite_FOUND
X11_Xcursor_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xcursor_LIB, X11_Xcursor_FOUND
X11_Xdamage_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xdamage_LIB, X11_Xdamage_FOUND
X11_Xdmcp_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xdmcp_LIB, X11_Xdmcp_FOUND
X11_Xext_LIB, X11_Xext_FOUND
X11_dpms_INCLUDE_PATH, (in X11_Xext_LIB), X11_dpms_FOUND
X11_XShm_INCLUDE_PATH, (in X11_Xext_LIB), X11_XShm_FOUND
X11_Xshape_INCLUDE_PATH, (in X11_Xext_LIB), X11_Xshape_FOUND
X11_xf86misc_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xxf86misc_LIB, X11_xf86misc_FOUND
X11_xf86vmode_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_xf86vmode_FOUND
X11_Xfixes_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xfixes_LIB, X11_Xfixes_FOUND
X11_Xft_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xft_LIB, X11_Xft_FOUND
X11_Xi_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xi_LIB, X11_Xi_FOUND
X11_Xinerama_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xinerama_LIB, X11_Xinerama_FOUND
X11_Xinput_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xinput_LIB, X11_Xinput_FOUND
X11_Xkb_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xkb_FOUND
X11_Xkblib_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xkb_FOUND
X11_Xpm_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xpm_LIB, X11_Xpm_FOUND
X11_XTest_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_XTest_LIB, X11_XTest_FOUND
X11_Xrandr_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xrandr_LIB, X11_Xrandr_FOUND
X11_Xrender_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xrender_LIB, X11_Xrender_FOUND
X11_Xscreensaver_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xscreensaver_LIB, X11_Xscreensaver_FOUND
X11_Xt_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xt_LIB, X11_Xt_FOUND
X11_Xutil_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xutil_FOUND
X11_Xv_INCLUDE_PATH, X11_Xv_LIB, X11_Xv_FOUND
FindXMLRPC
Find xmlrpc
Find the native XMLRPC headers and libraries.
XMLRPC_INCLUDE_DIRS - where to find xmlrpc.h, etc.
XMLRPC_LIBRARIES - List of libraries when using xmlrpc.
XMLRPC_FOUND - True if xmlrpc found.
XMLRPC modules may be specified as components for this find
module. Modules may be listed by running "xmlrpc-c-config".
Modules include:
c++ C++ wrapper code
libwww-client libwww-based client
cgi-server CGI-based server
abyss-server ABYSS-based server
Typical usage:
FIND_PACKAGE(XMLRPC REQUIRED libwww-client)
FindZLIB
Find zlib
Find the native ZLIB includes and library
ZLIB_INCLUDE_DIRS - where to find zlib.h, etc.
ZLIB_LIBRARIES - List of libraries when using zlib.
ZLIB_FOUND - True if zlib found.
ZLIB_VERSION_STRING - The version of zlib found (x.y.z)
ZLIB_MAJOR_VERSION - the major version of zlib
ZLIB_MINOR_VERSION - The minor version of zlib
ZLIB_PATCH_VERSION - The patch version of zlib
Findlibarchive
Try to find libarchive
Once done this will define
LIBARCHIVE_FOUND - system has libarchive
LIBARCHIVE_INCLUDE_DIR - the libarchive include directory
LIBARCHIVE_LIBRARY - Link this to use libarchive
HAVE_LIBARCHIVE_GZIP_SUPPORT - whether libarchive has been compiled with gzip support
HAVE_LIBARCHIVE_LZMA_SUPPORT - whether libarchive has been compiled with lzma support
HAVE_LIBARCHIVE_XZ_SUPPORT - whether libarchive has been compiled with xz support
Copyright (c) 2006, Pino Toscano, <toscano.pino@tiscali.it>
Redistribution and use is allowed according to the terms of the
BSD license. For details see the accompanying
COPYING-CMAKE-SCRIPTS file.
Findosg
NOTE: It is highly recommended that you use the new
FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake introduced in CMake 2.6.3 and not use
this Find module directly.
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osg This module defines
OSG_FOUND - Was the Osg found? OSG_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find
the headers OSG_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for
the OSG (use this)
OSG_LIBRARY - The OSG library OSG_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The OSG debug
library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgAnimation
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgAnimation This module defines
OSGANIMATION_FOUND - Was osgAnimation found?
OSGANIMATION_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
OSGANIMATION_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for the
OSG (use this)
OSGANIMATION_LIBRARY - The OSG library
OSGANIMATION_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The OSG debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgDB
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgDB This module defines
OSGDB_FOUND - Was osgDB found? OSGDB_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find
the headers OSGDB_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for
the osgDB (use this)
OSGDB_LIBRARY - The osgDB library OSGDB_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
osgDB debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgFX
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgFX This module defines
OSGFX_FOUND - Was osgFX found? OSGFX_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find
the headers OSGFX_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for
the osgFX (use this)
OSGFX_LIBRARY - The osgFX library OSGFX_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
osgFX debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgGA
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgGA This module defines
OSGGA_FOUND - Was osgGA found? OSGGA_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find
the headers OSGGA_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link against for
the osgGA (use this)
OSGGA_LIBRARY - The osgGA library OSGGA_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
osgGA debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgIntrospection
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgINTROSPECTION This module defines
OSGINTROSPECTION_FOUND - Was osgIntrospection found?
OSGINTROSPECTION_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
OSGINTROSPECTION_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for
osgIntrospection (use this)
OSGINTROSPECTION_LIBRARY - The osgIntrospection library
OSGINTROSPECTION_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgIntrospection debug
library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgManipulator
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgManipulator This module defines
OSGMANIPULATOR_FOUND - Was osgManipulator found?
OSGMANIPULATOR_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
OSGMANIPULATOR_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for
osgManipulator (use this)
OSGMANIPULATOR_LIBRARY - The osgManipulator library
OSGMANIPULATOR_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgManipulator debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgParticle
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgParticle This module defines
OSGPARTICLE_FOUND - Was osgParticle found?
OSGPARTICLE_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgParticle
(use this)
OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARY - The osgParticle library
OSGPARTICLE_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgParticle debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgProducer
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgProducer This module defines
OSGPRODUCER_FOUND - Was osgProducer found?
OSGPRODUCER_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to find the headers
OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for osgProducer
(use this)
OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARY - The osgProducer library
OSGPRODUCER_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgProducer debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgShadow
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgShadow This module defines
OSGSHADOW_FOUND - Was osgShadow found? OSGSHADOW_INCLUDE_DIR -
Where to find the headers OSGSHADOW_LIBRARIES - The libraries to
link for osgShadow (use this)
OSGSHADOW_LIBRARY - The osgShadow library
OSGSHADOW_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgShadow debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgSim
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgSim This module defines
OSGSIM_FOUND - Was osgSim found? OSGSIM_INCLUDE_DIR - Where to
find the headers OSGSIM_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link for
osgSim (use this)
OSGSIM_LIBRARY - The osgSim library OSGSIM_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The
osgSim debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgTerrain
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgTerrain This module defines
OSGTERRAIN_FOUND - Was osgTerrain found? OSGTERRAIN_INCLUDE_DIR
- Where to find the headers OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARIES - The libraries
to link for osgTerrain (use this)
OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARY - The osgTerrain library
OSGTERRAIN_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgTerrain debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgText
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgText This module defines
OSGTEXT_FOUND - Was osgText found? OSGTEXT_INCLUDE_DIR - Where
to find the headers OSGTEXT_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link
for osgText (use this)
OSGTEXT_LIBRARY - The osgText library OSGTEXT_LIBRARY_DEBUG -
The osgText debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgUtil
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgUtil This module defines
OSGUTIL_FOUND - Was osgUtil found? OSGUTIL_INCLUDE_DIR - Where
to find the headers OSGUTIL_LIBRARIES - The libraries to link
for osgUtil (use this)
OSGUTIL_LIBRARY - The osgUtil library OSGUTIL_LIBRARY_DEBUG -
The osgUtil debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgViewer
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgViewer This module defines
OSGVIEWER_FOUND - Was osgViewer found? OSGVIEWER_INCLUDE_DIR -
Where to find the headers OSGVIEWER_LIBRARIES - The libraries to
link for osgViewer (use this)
OSGVIEWER_LIBRARY - The osgViewer library
OSGVIEWER_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgViewer debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgVolume
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgVolume This module defines
OSGVOLUME_FOUND - Was osgVolume found? OSGVOLUME_INCLUDE_DIR -
Where to find the headers OSGVOLUME_LIBRARIES - The libraries to
link for osgVolume (use this)
OSGVOLUME_LIBRARY - The osgVolume library
OSGVOLUME_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgVolume debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
Created by Eric Wing.
FindosgWidget
This is part of the Findosg* suite used to find OpenSceneGraph
components. Each component is separate and you must opt in to
each module. You must also opt into OpenGL and OpenThreads (and
Producer if needed) as these modules won’t do it for you. This
is to allow you control over your own system piece by piece in
case you need to opt out of certain components or change the
Find behavior for a particular module (perhaps because the
default FindOpenGL.cmake module doesn’t work with your system as
an example). If you want to use a more convenient module that
includes everything, use the FindOpenSceneGraph.cmake instead of
the Findosg*.cmake modules.
Locate osgWidget This module defines
OSGWIDGET_FOUND - Was osgWidget found? OSGWIDGET_INCLUDE_DIR -
Where to find the headers OSGWIDGET_LIBRARIES - The libraries to
link for osgWidget (use this)
OSGWIDGET_LIBRARY - The osgWidget library
OSGWIDGET_LIBRARY_DEBUG - The osgWidget debug library
$OSGDIR is an environment variable that would correspond to the
./configure --prefix=$OSGDIR used in building osg.
FindosgWidget.cmake tweaked from Findosg* suite as created by
Eric Wing.
Findosg_functions
This CMake file contains two macros to assist with searching for
OSG libraries and nodekits.
FindwxWidgets
Find a wxWidgets (a.k.a., wxWindows) installation.
This module finds if wxWidgets is installed and selects a
default configuration to use. wxWidgets is a modular library. To
specify the modules that you will use, you need to name them as
components to the package:
FIND_PACKAGE(wxWidgets COMPONENTS base core ...)
There are two search branches: a windows style and a unix style.
For windows, the following variables are searched for and set to
defaults in case of multiple choices. Change them if the
defaults are not desired (i.e., these are the only variables you
should change to select a configuration):
wxWidgets_ROOT_DIR - Base wxWidgets directory
(e.g., C:/wxWidgets-2.6.3).
wxWidgets_LIB_DIR - Path to wxWidgets libraries
(e.g., C:/wxWidgets-2.6.3/lib/vc_lib).
wxWidgets_CONFIGURATION - Configuration to use
(e.g., msw, mswd, mswu, mswunivud, etc.)
wxWidgets_EXCLUDE_COMMON_LIBRARIES
- Set to TRUE to exclude linking of
commonly required libs (e.g., png tiff
jpeg zlib regex expat).
For unix style it uses the wx-config utility. You can select
between debug/release, unicode/ansi, universal/non-universal,
and static/shared in the QtDialog or ccmake interfaces by
turning ON/OFF the following variables:
wxWidgets_USE_DEBUG
wxWidgets_USE_UNICODE
wxWidgets_USE_UNIVERSAL
wxWidgets_USE_STATIC
The following are set after the configuration is done for both
windows and unix style:
wxWidgets_FOUND - Set to TRUE if wxWidgets was found.
wxWidgets_INCLUDE_DIRS - Include directories for WIN32
i.e., where to find "wx/wx.h" and
"wx/setup.h"; possibly empty for unices.
wxWidgets_LIBRARIES - Path to the wxWidgets libraries.
wxWidgets_LIBRARY_DIRS - compile time link dirs, useful for
rpath on UNIX. Typically an empty string
in WIN32 environment.
wxWidgets_DEFINITIONS - Contains defines required to compile/link
against WX, e.g. WXUSINGDLL
wxWidgets_DEFINITIONS_DEBUG- Contains defines required to compile/link
against WX debug builds, e.g. __WXDEBUG__
wxWidgets_CXX_FLAGS - Include dirs and compiler flags for
unices, empty on WIN32. Essentially
"‘wx-config --cxxflags‘".
wxWidgets_USE_FILE - Convenience include file.
Sample usage:
FIND_PACKAGE(wxWidgets COMPONENTS base core gl net)
IF(wxWidgets_FOUND)
INCLUDE(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE})
# and for each of your dependent executable/library targets:
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(<YourTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})
ENDIF(wxWidgets_FOUND)
If wxWidgets is required (i.e., not an optional part):
FIND_PACKAGE(wxWidgets REQUIRED base core gl net)
INCLUDE(${wxWidgets_USE_FILE})
# and for each of your dependent executable/library targets:
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(<YourTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})
FindwxWindows
Find wxWindows (wxWidgets) installation
This module finds if wxWindows/wxWidgets is installed and
determines where the include files and libraries are. It also
determines what the name of the library is. Please note this
file is DEPRECATED and replaced by FindwxWidgets.cmake. This
code sets the following variables:
WXWINDOWS_FOUND = system has WxWindows
WXWINDOWS_LIBRARIES = path to the wxWindows libraries
on Unix/Linux with additional
linker flags from
"wx-config --libs"
CMAKE_WXWINDOWS_CXX_FLAGS = Compiler flags for wxWindows,
essentially "‘wx-config --cxxflags‘"
on Linux
WXWINDOWS_INCLUDE_DIR = where to find "wx/wx.h" and "wx/setup.h"
WXWINDOWS_LINK_DIRECTORIES = link directories, useful for rpath on
Unix
WXWINDOWS_DEFINITIONS = extra defines
OPTIONS If you need OpenGL support please
SET(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)
in your CMakeLists.txt *before* you include this file.
HAVE_ISYSTEM - true required to replace -I by -isystem on g++
For convenience include Use_wxWindows.cmake in your project’s
CMakeLists.txt using INCLUDE(Use_wxWindows).
USAGE
SET(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)
FIND_PACKAGE(wxWindows)
NOTES wxWidgets 2.6.x is supported for monolithic builds e.g.
compiled in wx/build/msw dir as:
nmake -f makefile.vc BUILD=debug SHARED=0 USE_OPENGL=1 MONOLITHIC=1
DEPRECATED
CMAKE_WX_CAN_COMPILE
WXWINDOWS_LIBRARY
CMAKE_WX_CXX_FLAGS
WXWINDOWS_INCLUDE_PATH
AUTHOR Jan Woetzel <http://www.mip.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~jw>
(07/2003-01/2006)
FortranCInterface
Fortran/C Interface Detection
This module automatically detects the API by which C and Fortran
languages interact. Variables indicate if the mangling is
found:
FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_FOUND = Global subroutines and functions
FortranCInterface_MODULE_FOUND = Module subroutines and functions
(declared by "MODULE PROCEDURE")
A function is provided to generate a C header file containing
macros to mangle symbol names:
FortranCInterface_HEADER(<file>
[MACRO_NAMESPACE <macro-ns>]
[SYMBOL_NAMESPACE <ns>]
[SYMBOLS [<module>:]<function> ...])
It generates in <file> definitions of the following macros:
#define FortranCInterface_GLOBAL (name,NAME) ...
#define FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_(name,NAME) ...
#define FortranCInterface_MODULE (mod,name, MOD,NAME) ...
#define FortranCInterface_MODULE_(mod,name, MOD,NAME) ...
These macros mangle four categories of Fortran symbols,
respectively:
- Global symbols without ’_’: call mysub()
- Global symbols with ’_’ : call my_sub()
- Module symbols without ’_’: use mymod; call mysub()
- Module symbols with ’_’ : use mymod; call my_sub()
If mangling for a category is not known, its macro is left
undefined. All macros require raw names in both lower case and
upper case. The MACRO_NAMESPACE option replaces the default
"FortranCInterface_" prefix with a given namespace "<macro-ns>".
The SYMBOLS option lists symbols to mangle automatically with C
preprocessor definitions:
<function> ==> #define <ns><function> ...
<module>:<function> ==> #define <ns><module>_<function> ...
If the mangling for some symbol is not known then no
preprocessor definition is created, and a warning is displayed.
The SYMBOL_NAMESPACE option prefixes all preprocessor
definitions generated by the SYMBOLS option with a given
namespace "<ns>".
Example usage:
include(FortranCInterface)
FortranCInterface_HEADER(FC.h MACRO_NAMESPACE "FC_")
This creates a "FC.h" header that defines mangling macros
FC_GLOBAL(), FC_GLOBAL_(), FC_MODULE(), and FC_MODULE_().
Example usage:
include(FortranCInterface)
FortranCInterface_HEADER(FCMangle.h
MACRO_NAMESPACE "FC_"
SYMBOL_NAMESPACE "FC_"
SYMBOLS mysub mymod:my_sub)
This creates a "FC.h" header that defines the same FC_*()
mangling macros as the previous example plus preprocessor
symbols FC_mysub and FC_mymod_my_sub.
Another function is provided to verify that the Fortran and
C/C++ compilers work together:
FortranCInterface_VERIFY([CXX] [QUIET])
It tests whether a simple test executable using Fortran and C
(and C++ when the CXX option is given) compiles and links
successfully. The result is stored in the cache entry
FortranCInterface_VERIFIED_C (or FortranCInterface_VERIFIED_CXX
if CXX is given) as a boolean. If the check fails and QUIET is
not given the function terminates with a FATAL_ERROR message
describing the problem. The purpose of this check is to stop a
build early for incompatible compiler combinations.
FortranCInterface is aware of possible GLOBAL and MODULE
manglings for many Fortran compilers, but it also provides an
interface to specify new possible manglings. Set the variables
FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS
FortranCInterface_MODULE_SYMBOLS
before including FortranCInterface to specify manglings of the
symbols "MySub", "My_Sub", "MyModule:MySub", and
"My_Module:My_Sub". For example, the code:
set(FortranCInterface_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS mysub_ my_sub__ MYSUB_)
# ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^
set(FortranCInterface_MODULE_SYMBOLS
__mymodule_MOD_mysub __my_module_MOD_my_sub)
# ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
include(FortranCInterface)
tells FortranCInterface to try given GLOBAL and MODULE
manglings. (The carets point at raw symbol names for clarity in
this example but are not needed.)
GetPrerequisites
GetPrerequisites.cmake
This script provides functions to list the .dll, .dylib or .so
files that an executable or shared library file depends on. (Its
prerequisites.)
It uses various tools to obtain the list of required shared
library files:
dumpbin (Windows)
ldd (Linux/Unix)
otool (Mac OSX)
The following functions are provided by this script:
gp_append_unique
is_file_executable
gp_item_default_embedded_path
(projects can override with gp_item_default_embedded_path_override)
gp_resolve_item
(projects can override with gp_resolve_item_override)
gp_resolved_file_type
(projects can override with gp_resolved_file_type_override)
gp_file_type
get_prerequisites
list_prerequisites
list_prerequisites_by_glob
Requires CMake 2.6 or greater because it uses function, break,
return and PARENT_SCOPE.
InstallRequiredSystemLibraries
By including this file, all files in the
CMAKE_INSTALL_DEBUG_LIBRARIES, will be installed with
INSTALL_PROGRAMS into /bin for WIN32 and /lib for non-win32. If
CMAKE_SKIP_INSTALL_RULES is set to TRUE before including this
file, then the INSTALL command is not called. The user can use
the variable CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS to use a custom
install command and install them into any directory they want.
If it is the MSVC compiler, then the microsoft run time
libraries will be found and automatically added to the
CMAKE_INSTALL_DEBUG_LIBRARIES, and installed. If
CMAKE_INSTALL_DEBUG_LIBRARIES is set and it is the MSVC
compiler, then the debug libraries are installed when available.
If CMAKE_INSTALL_MFC_LIBRARIES is set then the MFC run time
libraries are installed as well as the CRT run time libraries.
MacroAddFileDependencies
MACRO_ADD_FILE_DEPENDENCIES(<_file> depend_files...)
Using the macro MACRO_ADD_FILE_DEPENDENCIES() is discouraged.
There are usually better ways to specifiy the correct
dependencies.
MACRO_ADD_FILE_DEPENDENCIES(<_file> depend_files...) is just a
convenience wrapper around the OBJECT_DEPENDS source file
property. You can just use SET_PROPERTY(SOURCE <file> APPEND
PROPERTY OBJECT_DEPENDS depend_files) instead.
Qt4ConfigDependentSettings
This file is included by FindQt4.cmake, don’t include it
directly.
Qt4Macros
This file is included by FindQt4.cmake, don’t include it
directly.
SelectLibraryConfigurations
select_library_configurations( basename )
This macro takes a library base name as an argument, and will
choose good values for basename_LIBRARY, basename_LIBRARIES,
basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG, and basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE depending
on what has been found and set. If only
basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE is defined, basename_LIBRARY,
basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG, and basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE will be set
to the release value. If only basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG is
defined, then basename_LIBRARY, basename_LIBRARY_DEBUG and
basename_LIBRARY_RELEASE will take the debug value.
If the generator supports configuration types, then
basename_LIBRARY and basename_LIBRARIES will be set with debug
and optimized flags specifying the library to be used for the
given configuration. If no build type has been set or the
generator in use does not support configuration types, then
basename_LIBRARY and basename_LIBRARIES will take only the
release values.
SquishTestScript
This script launches a GUI test using Squish. You should not
call the script directly; instead, you should access it via the
SQUISH_ADD_TEST macro that is defined in FindSquish.cmake.
This script starts the Squish server, launches the test on the
client, and finally stops the squish server. If any of these
steps fail (including if the tests do not pass) then a fatal
error is raised.
TestBigEndian
Define macro to determine endian type
Check if the system is big endian or little endian
TEST_BIG_ENDIAN(VARIABLE)
VARIABLE - variable to store the result to
TestCXXAcceptsFlag
Test CXX compiler for a flag
Check if the CXX compiler accepts a flag
Macro CHECK_CXX_ACCEPTS_FLAG(FLAGS VARIABLE) -
checks if the function exists
FLAGS - the flags to try
VARIABLE - variable to store the result
TestForANSIForScope
Check for ANSI for scope support
Check if the compiler restricts the scope of variables declared
in a for-init-statement to the loop body.
CMAKE_NO_ANSI_FOR_SCOPE - holds result
TestForANSIStreamHeaders
Test for compiler support of ANSI stream headers iostream, etc.
check if the compiler supports the standard ANSI iostream header
(without the .h)
CMAKE_NO_ANSI_STREAM_HEADERS - defined by the results
TestForSSTREAM
Test for compiler support of ANSI sstream header
check if the compiler supports the standard ANSI sstream header
CMAKE_NO_ANSI_STRING_STREAM - defined by the results
TestForSTDNamespace
Test for std:: namespace support
check if the compiler supports std:: on stl classes
CMAKE_NO_STD_NAMESPACE - defined by the results
UseEcos
This module defines variables and macros required to build eCos
application.
This file contains the following macros:
ECOS_ADD_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES() - add the eCos include dirs
ECOS_ADD_EXECUTABLE(name source1 ... sourceN ) - create an eCos
executable ECOS_ADJUST_DIRECTORY(VAR source1 ... sourceN ) -
adjusts the path of the source files and puts the result into
VAR
Macros for selecting the toolchain: ECOS_USE_ARM_ELF_TOOLS()
- enable the ARM ELF toolchain for the directory where it is
called ECOS_USE_I386_ELF_TOOLS() - enable the i386 ELF
toolchain for the directory where it is called
ECOS_USE_PPC_EABI_TOOLS() - enable the PowerPC toolchain
for the directory where it is called
It contains the following variables: ECOS_DEFINITIONS
ECOSCONFIG_EXECUTABLE ECOS_CONFIG_FILE - defaults
to ecos.ecc, if your eCos configuration file has a different
name, adjust this variable for internal use only:
ECOS_ADD_TARGET_LIB
UsePkgConfig
obsolete pkg-config module for CMake
Defines the following macros:
PKGCONFIG(package includedir libdir linkflags cflags)
Calling PKGCONFIG will fill the desired information into the 4
given arguments, e.g. PKGCONFIG(libart-2.0 LIBART_INCLUDE_DIR
LIBART_LINK_DIR LIBART_LINK_FLAGS LIBART_CFLAGS) if pkg-config
was NOT found or the specified software package doesn’t exist,
the variable will be empty when the function returns, otherwise
they will contain the respective information
UseQt4 Use Module for QT4
Sets up C and C++ to use Qt 4. It is assumed that FindQt.cmake
has already been loaded. See FindQt.cmake for information on
how to load Qt 4 into your CMake project.
UseSWIG
SWIG module for CMake
Defines the following macros:
SWIG_ADD_MODULE(name language [ files ])
- Define swig module with given name and specified language
SWIG_LINK_LIBRARIES(name [ libraries ])
- Link libraries to swig module
All other macros are for internal use only. To get the actual
name of the swig module, use: ${SWIG_MODULE_${name}_REAL_NAME}.
Set Source files properties such as CPLUSPLUS and SWIG_FLAGS to
specify special behavior of SWIG. Also global CMAKE_SWIG_FLAGS
can be used to add special flags to all swig calls. Another
special variable is CMAKE_SWIG_OUTDIR, it allows one to specify
where to write all the swig generated module (swig -outdir
option) The name-specific variable SWIG_MODULE_<name>_EXTRA_DEPS
may be used to specify extra dependencies for the generated
modules. If the source file generated by swig need some special
flag you can use SET_SOURCE_FILES_PROPERTIES(
${swig_generated_file_fullname}
PROPERTIES COMPILE_FLAGS "-bla")
Use_wxWindows
---------------------------------------------------
This convenience include finds if wxWindows is installed and set
the appropriate libs, incdirs, flags etc. author Jan Woetzel <jw
-at- mip.informatik.uni-kiel.de> (07/2003)
USAGE:
just include Use_wxWindows.cmake
in your projects CMakeLists.txt
INCLUDE( ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH}/Use_wxWindows.cmake)
if you are sure you need GL then
SET(WXWINDOWS_USE_GL 1)
*before* you include this file.
UsewxWidgets
Convenience include for using wxWidgets library
Finds if wxWidgets is installed and set the appropriate libs,
incdirs, flags etc. INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES, LINK_DIRECTORIES and
ADD_DEFINITIONS are called.
USAGE
SET( wxWidgets_USE_LIBS gl xml xrc ) # optionally: more than wx std libs
FIND_PACKAGE(wxWidgets REQUIRED)
INCLUDE( ${xWidgets_USE_FILE} )
... add your targets here, e.g. ADD_EXECUTABLE/ ADD_LIBRARY ...
TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIERS( <yourWxDependantTarget> ${wxWidgets_LIBRARIES})
DEPRECATED
LINK_LIBRARIES is not called in favor of adding dependencies per target.
AUTHOR
Jan Woetzel <jw -at- mip.informatik.uni-kiel.de>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2000-2009 Kitware, Inc., Insight Software Consortium. All
rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
Neither the names of Kitware, Inc., the Insight Software Consortium,
nor the names of their contributors may be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS
IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
SEE ALSO
ccmake(1), cpack(1), ctest(1), cmakecommands(1), cmakecompat(1),
cmakemodules(1), cmakeprops(1), cmakevars(1)
The following resources are available to get help using CMake:
Home Page
http://www.cmake.org
The primary starting point for learning about CMake.
Frequently Asked Questions
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ
A Wiki is provided containing answers to frequently asked
questions.
Online Documentation
http://www.cmake.org/HTML/Documentation.html
Links to available documentation may be found on this web page.
Mailing List
http://www.cmake.org/HTML/MailingLists.html
For help and discussion about using cmake, a mailing list is
provided at cmake@cmake.org. The list is member-post-only but
one may sign up on the CMake web page. Please first read the
full documentation at http://www.cmake.org before posting
questions to the list.
Summary of helpful links:
Home: http://www.cmake.org
Docs: http://www.cmake.org/HTML/Documentation.html
Mail: http://www.cmake.org/HTML/MailingLists.html
FAQ: http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ