I have a CMakeLists.txt with the following in it, that I can not modify:
set(BUILD_SHARED_LIBS ON)
I want to override this variable use the commandline. I tried this:
cmake -UBUILD_SHARED_LIBS -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF ..
but it has no effect. Is there any way to tell cmake to use a value from the commandline instead of this value?
Note: I am aware that using the cache like shown below would solve the problem, but as I cannot edit the file, that sadly is not an option:
set(BUILD_SHARED_LIBS ON CACHE BOOL "library build mode")
Using command line you cannot override setting of the normal (non-cached) variable.
If you pass a variable via command line, then it is always a cache variable. At the time when normal flavor of the variable is set in the CMakeLists.txt, both flavors exist. But when a variable is dereferenced, CMake prefers normal flavor to the cached one. See more in the variables' documentation.
Related
I have very complex CMake project. Where variables are often defined like set("${scope}_${variable_name}" value..) or other complex way.
I need to find where a variable is defined, where it obtains a value.
I tried variable_watch at the beginning of the cmake, but that only gives me READ_ACCESS so I guess that setting the variable is not covered in variable_watch mechanics.
I need to find out where that variable is set, but I run out of ideas. Variable watch does not help, search sources fails due to complex variable definitions.
You can add on top of the CMakeLists:
macro(set name)
message(STATUS "defninng ${name}")
_set(${name} ${ARGV})
endmacro()
set(a b)
and print CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_* variables.
You could do this without modifying the cmake files: Simply use grep (or windows equivalent) in combination with running the cmake configuration with the --trace-expand option.
Using this option for example
message("TGT_TYPE = ${TGT_TYPE}")
could result in console output like
/some/path/CMakeLists.txt(71): message(TGT_TYPE = UTILITY )
TGT_TYPE = UTILITY
so
cmake --trace-expand build_dir | grep -P "[sS][eE][tT]\s*\(\s*VARIABLE_NAME\s"
should provide you with the line containing the logic to set VARIABLE_NAME in the project you've set up in the directory build_dir.
I would like to have a command or option to list all the modified cache variables of the current build configuration. While cmake -L[AH] is nice, it is also quite overwhelming and doesn't show which are non-default values.
There seems to be a variable property MODIFIED that sounds exactly like what I'm looking for - but the documentation is not very reassuring:
Internal management property. Do not set or get.
This is an internal cache entry property managed by CMake to track interactive user modification of entries. Ignore it.
This question also didn't help: CMAKE: Print out all accessible variables in a script
There are so many ways you could change or initialize variables in CMake (command line, environment variables, script files, etc.) that you won't be able to cover them all.
I just came up with the following script that covers the command line switches. Put the following file in your CMake project's root folder and you get the modified variables printed:
PreLoad.cmake
set(_file "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/UserModifiedVars.txt")
get_directory_property(_vars CACHE_VARIABLES)
list(FIND _vars "CMAKE_BACKWARDS_COMPATIBILITY" _idx)
if (_idx EQUAL -1)
list(REMOVE_ITEM _vars "CMAKE_COMMAND" "CMAKE_CPACK_COMMAND" "CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND" "CMAKE_ROOT")
file(WRITE "${_file}" "${_vars}")
else()
file(READ "${_file}" _vars)
endif()
foreach(_var IN LISTS _vars)
message(STATUS "User modified ${_var} = ${${_var}}")
endforeach()
This will load before anything else and therefore can relatively easily identify the user modified variables and store them into a file for later reference.
The CMAKE_BACKWARDS_COMPATIBILITY is a cached variable set by CMake at the end of a configuration run and therefor is used here to identify an already configured CMake project.
Reference
CMake: In which Order are Files parsed (Cache, Toolchain, …)?
I have a CMake project which lets a globally set variable (set with -DARDUINO_SDK_PATH=/a/b/c on command line) disappear i.e. suddenly the given value is gone which leads to a fatal error.
I know there are different ways to "hide" a variable (e.g. inside functions or external projects)
In my case:
the variable is not being set explicitly anywhere in the code (e.g. via set() or find_path())
the access which leads to the error is on top level (i.e. not inside a function)
there are instructions (i.e. same file/line) where in one case the variable has the value it's been given and the next time it's gone
Tracing the variable with variable_watch(ARDUINO_SDK_PATH) I can see that everything works fine before the compiler is being checked:
cmake -DARDUINO_SDK_PATH=/a/b/c <path>
...
... everything fine, ${DARDUINO_SDK_PATH} == '/a/b/c' everywhere
...
-- Check for working C compiler: /usr/bin/avr-gcc
...
... here the variable is empty and not being traced any more
...
Here is my suggestion:
Does the compiler check (indicated by check for working C compiler .. on the terminal) have it's own variable space and does not know variables provided on command line?
Note: This question is a generalization of this question, which has become way too specialized but might offer some useful background information.
That any modification to variable is not traced after the variable_watch() command seems like a bug somewhere in CMake to me.
Generally speaking a "cached CMake variable" can be hidden by a "normal CMake variable" with the same name. But e.g. find_path() won't run again or modify a variable if already set.
Here is an example:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.4)
project(VariableWatchTest NONE)
variable_watch(MY_TEST_VAR)
set(MY_TEST_VAR "something" CACHE INTERNAL "")
message("${MY_TEST_VAR}")
set(MY_TEST_VAR "hiding something")
message("${MY_TEST_VAR}")
unset(MY_TEST_VAR)
message("${MY_TEST_VAR}")
find_path(MY_TEST_VAR NAMES "CMakeLists.txt" HINTS "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}")
message("${MY_TEST_VAR}")
Would give (without the variable_watch() messages:
-- something
-- hiding something
-- something
-- something
References
What's the CMake syntax to set and use variables?
I'm not sure whether this is a bug or a feature but (at least some) CMake variables are not available in certain steps of the CMake configuration procedure.
You can check this by adding something like this to your toolchain file:
MESSAGE("FOO: ${FOO}")
and run CMake like this
cd build-dir
cmake -DFOO=TEST ..
You will likely see FOO printed with value TEST once in the beginning of the configuration process and later printed again but being empty.
Just don't access variables from the global space inside a toolchain file (doesn't belong there anyway).
I'm asking this as a reminder to myself the next time I use CMake. It never sticks, and Google results aren't great.
What's the syntax to set and use variables in CMake?
When writing CMake scripts there is a lot you need to know about the syntax and how to use variables in CMake.
The Syntax
Strings using set():
set(MyString "Some Text")
set(MyStringWithVar "Some other Text: ${MyString}")
set(MyStringWithQuot "Some quote: \"${MyStringWithVar}\"")
Or with string():
string(APPEND MyStringWithContent " ${MyString}")
Lists using set():
set(MyList "a" "b" "c")
set(MyList ${MyList} "d")
Or better with list():
list(APPEND MyList "a" "b" "c")
list(APPEND MyList "d")
Lists of File Names:
set(MySourcesList "File.name" "File with Space.name")
list(APPEND MySourcesList "File.name" "File with Space.name")
add_excutable(MyExeTarget ${MySourcesList})
The Documentation
CMake/Language Syntax
CMake: Variables Lists Strings
CMake: Useful Variables
CMake set() Command
CMake string()Command
CMake list() Command
Cmake: Generator Expressions
The Scope or "What value does my variable have?"
First there are the "Normal Variables" and things you need to know about their scope:
Normal variables are visible to the CMakeLists.txt they are set in and everything called from there (add_subdirectory(), include(), macro() and function()).
The add_subdirectory() and function() commands are special, because they open-up their own scope.
Meaning variables set(...) there are only visible there and they make a copy of all normal variables of the scope level they are called from (called parent scope).
So if you are in a sub-directory or a function you can modify an already existing variable in the parent scope with set(... PARENT_SCOPE)
You can make use of this e.g. in functions by passing the variable name as a function parameter. An example would be function(xyz _resultVar) is setting set(${_resultVar} 1 PARENT_SCOPE)
On the other hand everything you set in include() or macro() scripts will modify variables directly in the scope of where they are called from.
Second there is the "Global Variables Cache". Things you need to know about the Cache:
If no normal variable with the given name is defined in the current scope, CMake will look for a matching Cache entry.
Cache values are stored in the CMakeCache.txt file in your binary output directory.
The values in the Cache can be modified in CMake's GUI application before they are generated. Therefore they - in comparison to normal variables - have a type and a docstring. I normally don't use the GUI so I use set(... CACHE INTERNAL "") to set my global and persistant values.
Please note that the INTERNAL cache variable type does imply FORCE
In a CMake script you can only change existing Cache entries if you use the set(... CACHE ... FORCE) syntax. This behavior is made use of e.g. by CMake itself, because it normally does not force Cache entries itself and therefore you can pre-define it with another value.
You can use the command line to set entries in the Cache with the syntax cmake -D var:type=value, just cmake -D var=value or with cmake -C CMakeInitialCache.cmake.
You can unset entries in the Cache with unset(... CACHE).
The Cache is global and you can set them virtually anywhere in your CMake scripts. But I would recommend you think twice about where to use Cache variables (they are global and they are persistant). I normally prefer the set_property(GLOBAL PROPERTY ...) and set_property(GLOBAL APPEND PROPERTY ...) syntax to define my own non-persistant global variables.
Variable Pitfalls and "How to debug variable changes?"
To avoid pitfalls you should know the following about variables:
Local variables do hide cached variables if both have the same name
The find_... commands - if successful - do write their results as cached variables "so that no call will search again"
Lists in CMake are just strings with semicolons delimiters and therefore the quotation-marks are important
set(MyVar a b c) is "a;b;c" and set(MyVar "a b c") is "a b c"
The recommendation is that you always use quotation marks with the one exception when you want to give a list as list
Generally prefer the list() command for handling lists
The whole scope issue described above. Especially it's recommended to use functions() instead of macros() because you don't want your local variables to show up in the parent scope.
A lot of variables used by CMake are set with the project() and enable_language() calls. So it could get important to set some variables before those commands are used.
Environment variables may differ from where CMake generated the make environment and when the the make files are put to use.
A change in an environment variable does not re-trigger the generation process.
Especially a generated IDE environment may differ from your command line, so it's recommended to transfer your environment variables into something that is cached.
Sometimes only debugging variables helps. The following may help you:
Simply use old printf debugging style by using the message() command. There also some ready to use modules shipped with CMake itself: CMakePrintHelpers.cmake, CMakePrintSystemInformation.cmake
Look into CMakeCache.txt file in your binary output directory. This file is even generated if the actual generation of your make environment fails.
Use variable_watch() to see where your variables are read/written/removed.
Look into the directory properties CACHE_VARIABLES and VARIABLES
Call cmake --trace ... to see the CMake's complete parsing process. That's sort of the last reserve, because it generates a lot of output.
Special Syntax
Environment Variables
You can can read $ENV{...} and write set(ENV{...} ...) environment variables
Generator Expressions
Generator expressions $<...> are only evaluated when CMake's generator writes the make environment (it comparison to normal variables that are replaced "in-place" by the parser)
Very handy e.g. in compiler/linker command lines and in multi-configuration environments
References
With ${${...}} you can give variable names in a variable and reference its content.
Often used when giving a variable name as function/macro parameter.
Constant Values (see if() command)
With if(MyVariable) you can directly check a variable for true/false (no need here for the enclosing ${...})
True if the constant is 1, ON, YES, TRUE, Y, or a non-zero number.
False if the constant is 0, OFF, NO, FALSE, N, IGNORE, NOTFOUND, the empty string, or ends in the suffix -NOTFOUND.
This syntax is often use for something like if(MSVC), but it can be confusing for someone who does not know this syntax shortcut.
Recursive substitutions
You can construct variable names using variables. After CMake has substituted the variables, it will check again if the result is a variable itself. This is very powerful feature used in CMake itself e.g. as sort of a template set(CMAKE_${lang}_COMPILER ...)
But be aware this can give you a headache in if() commands. Here is an example where CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID is "MSVC" and MSVC is "1":
if("${CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID}" STREQUAL "MSVC") is true, because it evaluates to if("1" STREQUAL "1")
if(CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_ID STREQUAL "MSVC") is false, because it evaluates to if("MSVC" STREQUAL "1")
So the best solution here would be - see above - to directly check for if(MSVC)
The good news is that this was fixed in CMake 3.1 with the introduction of policy CMP0054. I would recommend to always set cmake_policy(SET CMP0054 NEW) to "only interpret if() arguments as variables or keywords when unquoted."
The option() command
Mainly just cached strings that only can be ON or OFF and they allow some special handling like e.g. dependencies
But be aware, don't mistake the option with the set command. The value given to option is really only the "initial value" (transferred once to the cache during the first configuration step) and is afterwards meant to be changed by the user through CMake's GUI.
References
How is CMake used?
cmake, lost in the concept of global variables (and PARENT_SCOPE or add_subdirectory alternatives)
Looping over a string list
How to store CMake build settings
CMake compare to empty string with STREQUAL failed
When should I quote CMake variables?
Here are a couple basic examples to get started quick and dirty.
One item variable
Set variable:
SET(INSTALL_ETC_DIR "etc")
Use variable:
SET(INSTALL_ETC_CROND_DIR "${INSTALL_ETC_DIR}/cron.d")
Multi-item variable (ie. list)
Set variable:
SET(PROGRAM_SRCS
program.c
program_utils.c
a_lib.c
b_lib.c
config.c
)
Use variable:
add_executable(program "${PROGRAM_SRCS}")
CMake docs on variables
$ENV{FOO} for usage, where FOO is being picked up from the environment variable. otherwise use as ${FOO}, where FOO is some other variable. For setting, SET(FOO "foo") would be used in CMake.
I'm using CMake in my builds. I'm trying to set compiler flags like this:
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG "-option1 -option2 -option3")
however, my build fails because one of the compiler flags is not set.
When I check the value of the variable in CMake-GUI is empty:
Can someone point out what is happening?
What you see with cmake-gui is the cache status. You only see there variables that you explicitly cache, or predefined cmake cached variables.
Now, when you do:
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG "-option1 -option2 -option3")
You are doing something particular: you are setting a "local" (not cached) variable which has the same name of a predefined cmake cached variable. In C++ it would be like defining a local variable with the same name of a global variable: the local variable will hide your global variable.
From the set documentation. (The documentation calls "normal" what I called "local")
Both types can exist at the same time with the same name but different
values. When ${FOO} is evaluated, CMake first looks for a normal
variable 'FOO' in scope and uses it if set. If and only if no normal
variable exists then it falls back to the cache variable 'FOO'.
You are already effectively setting CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG, and the compiler will use the flags you have specified. You can check it with:
message(STATUS "CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG = ${CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG}")
So, your building is failing for another reason. Check which command line make generates: make VERBOSE=1.
By the way, I suggest you append your flags to the predefined ones, by doing:
set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS_DEBUG} -option1 -option2 -option3")
Also consider using the other predefined variable CMAKE_C_FLAGS, in case you want those settings to be propagated to all build types.
Edit:
After some iterations it turned out the problem was that the build type (CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE) was not set from cmake. This can either be done through the cmake-gui interface, or adding something like -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug or -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release to the cmake command line.