CMake module FindPostgreSQL.cmake that comes with Ubuntu and Debian have issues when you use find_package with PostGreSQL. We have a product that needs that and the best we can do is to ship our own version of FindPostgreSQL.cmake.
How can I then override CMake's FindPostgreSQL.cmake with our own without disturbing anything else? The project is found on this github repository
I put them into cmake/modules directory of my project.
CMake searches for a file called Find<package>.cmake in the
CMAKE_MODULE_PATH followed by the CMake installation. If the file is
found, it is read and processed by CMake.
From CMake documentation find_package: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/command/find_package.html
Related
I'm trying to build a cmake project, and the repo I have been given has the lines
find_library(gmp gmp)
if(NOT gmp)
message(FATAL_ERROR "gmp not found")
endif()
which cause CMake configuration to fail.
I have been told this CMake works on Redhat Enterprise Linux 7.3.
I have also been told this repo should build in any Linux environment with the correct libraries installed, and an Ubuntu environment has been specifically referenced.
I am building in Debian 9.4.0, I have installed gmp, libgmp.so is located at /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openssl-1.0.2/engines/libgmp.so
and I also have a libgmp.so.10 at /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libgmp.so.10.
So, to recap, I have been handed a repo I have been told builds, but it does not build, it fails at this specific step, and I can't get google to give me any relevant results on how to fix the issue/what I am doing wrong.
libgmp is installed, but the development libraries are not.
Cmake find_libraries looks for the files required for software development, and while the libgmp package is installed, the libgmp-dev package is not.
Install libgmp-dev.
CMake doesn't search "so-version" files:
If find_library is called for "gmp" library name, CMake searches libgmp.so file, but not libgmp.so.10 one.
Normally, the library file without so-version is just a soft link to the newest so-version file. If your Linux distro doesn't create such link, you may create it manually:
ln -s libgmp.so libgmp.so.10
If you want CMake to find /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openssl-1.0.2/engines/libgmp.so file, which is not under directory normally searched by CMake, you need to hint CMake about it. E.g. with PATHS option:
find_library(gmp gmp PATHS "/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openssl-1.0.2/engines")
I am developing two CMake projects: libABC and libXYZ. libXYZ requires libABC, and so I would like install FindABC.cmake in an appropriate location on Mac and Linux machines.
libABC and its related files are installed under /usr/local by default, and I think FindABC.cmake also should be installed under the same directory. I tried installing it in the following six different locations.
/usr/local/lib/cmake/ABC/FindABC.cmake
/usr/local/share/cmake/ABC/FindABC.cmake
/usr/local/lib/ABC/FindABC.cmake
/usr/local/share/ABC/FindABC.cmake
/usr/local/lib/ABC/cmake/FindABC.cmake
/usr/local/share/ABC/cmake/FindABC.cmake
However CMakeList.txt of libXYZ cannot find it with the following error.
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:51 (find_package):
By not providing "FindABC.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project
has asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by
"ABC", but CMake did not find one.
My cmake command was installed under /opt/local by using MacPorts on OS X. So I think it searches not /usr/local but only /opt/local.
I know that defining CMAKE_MODULE_PATH when executing cmake command solve this issue (e.g., cmake -DCMAKE_MODULE_PATH=/usr/local/lib/cmake/ABC), but I do not want to ask all users to do it every time.
My questions are
Q1. Where should I install FindABC.cmake during the libABC installation process?
Q2. How do I properly find FindABC.cmake in CMakeLists.txt of libXYZ without hard-coding CMAKE_MODULE_PATH in it?
I have found in library Poco under contrib a PocoConfig.cmake which I've copied under /cmake/Modules
I also added in my CMakeLists.txt:
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH} "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake/Modules/")
Now I run under /Build/cmake ..
And I keep getting:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:41 (find_package):
By not providing "FindPoco.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project has
asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by "Poco", but
CMake did not find one.
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "Poco" with any of
the following names:
PocoConfig.cmake
poco-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "Poco" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"Poco_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If "Poco"
provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has been
installed.
Obviously CMake is not finding the module file. What am I doing wrong, how to explicitly point CMake to that module file?
The PocoConfig.cmake doesn't works with find_package (otherwise, it would be named FindPoco.cmake), that's why you're getting this error.
Just include the PocoConfig.cmake in your CMakeLists.txt with:
include(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake/Modules/PocoConfig.cmake)
I've had similar issues. In my case I was recompiling with an old build folder in place - deleting the folder and recompiling worked.
I installed Ogre3D 1.8.1 (the source package) on Ubuntu 12.04 and everything went fine (I managed to run some samples on the Ogre interface). However, I hit a problem while I was compiling an external project (that one) that needed the OpenCV, ArUco and Ogre librarys. When I run the CMake of the project, I receive the following:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:46 (find_package):
By not providing "FindOGRE.cmake" in CMAKE_MODULE_PATH this project has
asked CMake to find a package configuration file provided by "OGRE", but
CMake did not find one.
Could not find a package configuration file provided by "OGRE" with any of
the following names:
OGREConfig.cmake
ogre-config.cmake
Add the installation prefix of "OGRE" to CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or set
"OGRE_DIR" to a directory containing one of the above files. If "OGRE"
provides a separate development package or SDK, be sure it has been
installed.
-- Configuring incomplete, errors occurred!
I know where the FindOGRE.cmake is, it's in the /usr/local/lib/OGRE/cmake, but I don't know how to say to CMake to look for that folder and fix this problem.
You just need to use the -D command line option along with the CMAKE_MODULE_PATH variable:
cmake . -DCMAKE_MODULE_PATH=/usr/local/lib/OGRE/cmake
Just for the record, an alternative solution would be to add the module path directly in the CMakeLists.txt. For example (tested on Debian 9):
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "/usr/share/OGRE/cmake/modules/;${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH}")
Just make sure to add the line before find_package is called.
For me, it only works to set the following in CMakeLists.txt before find_package:
set(OGRE_DIR /usr/share/OGRE/build/sdk/CMake)
Note that the CMake directory is the one containing OGREConfig.cmake. For some reason, my CMake ignores CMAKE_MODULE_PATH.
Maybe, of some help for someone
For me, this solution work on manjaro:
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "/usr/lib/OGRE/cmake;${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH}")
find_package(OGRE QUIET)
if (OGRE_FOUND)
include_directories( ${ogre_INCLUDE_DIR})
link_directories(${OGRE_LIBRARIES})
message(STATUS "OGRE: FOUND")
else()
message(STATUS "OGRE: NOT FOUND")
endif()
CMake cannot find my Eigen3 package. I set an environment variable called
EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR
pointing to the path where FindEigen3.cmake is.
Then in the CMakelists.txt I wrote:
find_package( Eigen3 REQUIRED )
include_directories( EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR )
I get next message of error:
CMake Error at C:/Program Files (x86)/CMake 2.8/share/cmake-2.8/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:91 (MESSAGE):
Could NOT find Eigen3 (missing: EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR EIGEN3_VERSION_OK)
(Required is at least version "2.91.0")
Call Stack (most recent call first):
C:/Program Files (x86)/CMake 2.8/share/cmake-2.8/Modules/FindPackageHandleStandardArgs.cmake:252 (_FPHSA_FAILURE_MESSAGE)
C:/Program Files (x86)/CMake 2.8/share/cmake-2.8/Modules/FindEigen3.cmake:76 (find_package_handle_standard_args)
test/test_quaternion/CMakeLists.txt:25 (find_package)
Any idea on what I am missing or doing wrong?
Since Eigen3 is completely header only, all you ever need is the path to the include directory. And this one, you are already defining manually anyway. So there is no real need for a FindEigen3.cmake or FIND_PACKAGE call.
Simply use
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES ( "$ENV{EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}" )
or
SET( EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR "$ENV{EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}" )
IF( NOT EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR )
MESSAGE( FATAL_ERROR "Please point the environment variable EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR to the include directory of your Eigen3 installation.")
ENDIF()
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES ( "${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}" )
A few notes:
If you want to access the content of a CMake variable, make sure to use ${...}
$ENV{....} accesses environment variables.
The second example will stop with an error if the environment variable is not set (and, thus, EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR cmake variable is empty)
Be careful to use quotation marks around (evaluated) variables if they could contain whitespace. Otherwise, CMake will interpret it as a list.
If you want to use custom find modules, make sure to either place them in you CMake installation or, as #Fraser pointed out above, make sure to point CMAKE_MODULE_PATH to the directory where it is. Not sure, but it could be that CMake checks the current directory as well automatically (where your CMakeLists.txt resides. Anyhow, setting EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR is totally unrelated to the location of FindEigen3.cmake
However, it could be that your FindEigen3 script evaluates this variable to determine the location of your Eigen3 installation.
Alternatively, self-built CMake-based projects often provide a <PackageName>Config.cmake. If you point a variable called <PackageName>_DIR to the directory containing this file, you can use FIND_PACKAGE( <PackageName> ...) as normal. See documentation of FIND_PACKAGE for details.
Eigen >= 3.3 has direct CMake integration, so it seems yours isn't set up correctly.
Assume Eigen has been installed to /opt/eigen/3.3 with default settings. Append or prepend the the location /opt/eigen/3.3 to the environment variable CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH e.g in bash:
export CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH="$CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH:/opt/eigen/3.3"
Then CMake should pick it up.
If you are writing your own CMakeLists.txt that uses Eigen I suggest using code like this:
find_package (Eigen3 3.3 REQUIRED)
add_executable (example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries (example Eigen3::Eigen)
You should not use include_directories since CMake 3 was released -- the targets approach should be preferred whenever available.
First, make sure Eigen is properly installed. Refer to the INSTALL file that comes with the tarball.
Second, copy the cmake/FindEigen3.cmake file from the tarball to the directory containing your CMakeLists.txt.
In your CMakeLists.txt add:
set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR})
find_package(Eigen3 REQUIRED)
include_directories(${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR})
Now you should be able to do e.g. #include <Eigen/Core>.
All of this comes (mostly) from this source.
This approach has the advantage over e.g. include_directories("$ENV{EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR}") that it the uses CMake's standard mechanism for finding external dependencies, making it easier for someone else (or your future self) to pick up the project, possibly on another platform.
(However, it would be nice if Eigen itself installed an EigenConfig.cmake file, making it accessible through the find_package mechanism without any extra paths.)
I found another solution here (which referred to here) which uses the pkg-config file :
find_package(PkgConfig)
pkg_search_module(Eigen3 REQUIRED eigen3)
As a detailed explanation of the note 7 from the top answer of Johannes. By using the "Config mode" rather than "Module mode" of CMake find_packate(), only writing
find_package( Eigen3 REQUIRED )
include_directories( EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR )
in CMakeLists.txt is enough.
Please refer to the INSTALL guidance text file contained in the eigen source code directory (eg. extracted from eigen-3.3.7.tar.gz downloaded from official website), which said:
Method 2. Installing using CMake
********************************
Let's call this directory 'source_dir' (where this INSTALL file is).
Before starting, create another directory which we will call 'build_dir'.
Do:
cd build_dir
cmake source_dir
make install
The "make install" step may require administrator privileges.
You can adjust the installation destination (the "prefix")
by passing the -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=myprefix option to cmake, as is
explained in the message that cmake prints at the end.
Just like installing usual CMake projects to your machine.
The difference from directly including the /usr/include/eigne3 or /usr/local/include/eigen3 directory is that, a configuration directory called eigen3/cmake will also be installed to /usr/share or usr/local/share. This configuration directory contains the Eigen3Config.cmake file, which can automatically be found by CMake to locate the eigen3 directory.
If you have not added Eigen Library to environment variable then do the following in CMakeLists.txt:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.9)
project(ProjectName)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11)
# set EIGEN_DIR variable to Eigen Library Path
set(EIGEN_DIR "C:\\Eigendir\\Eigen")
# include the directory
include_directories(${EIGEN_DIR})
add_executable(ProjectName main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(ProjectName ${EIGEN_DIR})
Another simple way that doesn't require adding an environment variable is to simply find eigen with the cmake find_path function https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.6/command/find_path.html. The example code finds the directory "Eigen" in paths "/usr/include/" and "/usr/local/include" with an additional search in subdirectory "eigen3".
find_path(EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIRS "Eigen" paths "/usr/include" "/usr/local/include" path_suffixes "eigen3")
message(${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIRS})
if ( NOT EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIRS )
message(FATAL_ERROR "CMake variable EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIRS not found.")
endif()
include_directories ( "${EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIRS}" )
You could try setting the CMAKE_MODULE_PATH to the location of Eigen subdirectory named "cmake":
cmake . -DCMAKE_MODULE_PATH=<Eigen root dir>/cmake/
I had a similar problem when run cmake .. && make on Google Colab on a project clone from github. I fixed it by editing CMakeLists.txt file and adding this line to it:
set(EIGEN3_INCLUDE_DIR "/usr/include/eigen3")
As you can see, my eigen3 was in /usr/include/eigen3 path (and I had installed it using !sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake libeigen3-dev)
When installing on Kubuntu 20.04 following steps from INSTALL:
Do:
cd build_dir
cmake source_dir
make install
using -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local/eigen-3.4.0 and sudo
FindEigen3.cmake is not installed. However, using
set(Eigen3_DIR "/usr/local/eigen/share/eigen3/cmake")
seem to work. FindEigen3.cmake is in the build directory
but it is not copied to the installation directory tree.
This worked:
Changed c++11 to c++14
Changed find_package(Eigen3 QUIET) to find_package(Eigen3 CONFIG)
Another simple way is:
if the Eigen library is in /opt/eigen/3.3/Eigen
include_directories(/opt/eigen/3.3)
which is equivalent to what Jai suggested
set(EIGEN_DIR "/opt/eigen/3.3")
include_directories(${EIGEN_DIR})
You need to read official documentation:
Click here
After install Eigen from tar and compile it correctly.
CMakeLists.txt will looks like this:
find_package(Eigen3 3.3 REQUIRED NO_MODULE)
add_executable(${PROJECT_NAME} something.cpp)
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT_NAME} Eigen3::Eigen)
It will be fine work.