install¶
Contents
Specify rules to run at install time.
Introduction¶
This command generates installation rules for a project. Rules specified by calls to this command within a source directory are executed in order during installation. The order across directories is not defined.
There are multiple signatures for this command. Some of them define installation options for files and targets. Options common to multiple signatures are covered here but they are valid only for signatures that specify them. The common options are:
DESTINATION
Specify the directory on disk to which a file will be installed. If a full path (with a leading slash or drive letter) is given it is used directly. If a relative path is given it is interpreted relative to the value of the
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
variable. The prefix can be relocated at install time using theDESTDIR
mechanism explained in theCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
variable documentation.PERMISSIONS
Specify permissions for installed files. Valid permissions are
OWNER_READ
,OWNER_WRITE
,OWNER_EXECUTE
,GROUP_READ
,GROUP_WRITE
,GROUP_EXECUTE
,WORLD_READ
,WORLD_WRITE
,WORLD_EXECUTE
,SETUID
, andSETGID
. Permissions that do not make sense on certain platforms are ignored on those platforms.CONFIGURATIONS
Specify a list of build configurations for which the install rule applies (Debug, Release, etc.).
COMPONENT
Specify an installation component name with which the install rule is associated, such as “runtime” or “development”. During component-specific installation only install rules associated with the given component name will be executed. During a full installation all components are installed. If
COMPONENT
is not provided a default component “Unspecified” is created. The default component name may be controlled with theCMAKE_INSTALL_DEFAULT_COMPONENT_NAME
variable.RENAME
Specify a name for an installed file that may be different from the original file. Renaming is allowed only when a single file is installed by the command.
OPTIONAL
Specify that it is not an error if the file to be installed does not exist.
Command signatures that install files may print messages during
installation. Use the CMAKE_INSTALL_MESSAGE
variable
to control which messages are printed.
Installing Targets¶
install(TARGETS targets... [EXPORT <export-name>]
[[ARCHIVE|LIBRARY|RUNTIME|FRAMEWORK|BUNDLE|
PRIVATE_HEADER|PUBLIC_HEADER|RESOURCE]
[DESTINATION <dir>]
[INCLUDES DESTINATION [<dir> ...]]
[PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[COMPONENT <component>]
[OPTIONAL] [NAMELINK_ONLY|NAMELINK_SKIP]
] [...])
The TARGETS
form specifies rules for installing targets from a
project. There are five kinds of target files that may be installed:
ARCHIVE
, LIBRARY
, RUNTIME
, FRAMEWORK
, and BUNDLE
.
Executables are treated as RUNTIME
targets, except that those
marked with the MACOSX_BUNDLE
property are treated as BUNDLE
targets on OS X. Static libraries are always treated as ARCHIVE
targets. Module libraries are always treated as LIBRARY
targets.
For non-DLL platforms shared libraries are treated as LIBRARY
targets, except that those marked with the FRAMEWORK
property are
treated as FRAMEWORK
targets on OS X. For DLL platforms the DLL
part of a shared library is treated as a RUNTIME
target and the
corresponding import library is treated as an ARCHIVE
target.
All Windows-based systems including Cygwin are DLL platforms.
The ARCHIVE
, LIBRARY
, RUNTIME
, and FRAMEWORK
arguments
change the type of target to which the subsequent properties apply.
If none is given the installation properties apply to all target
types. If only one is given then only targets of that type will be
installed (which can be used to install just a DLL or just an import
library). The INCLUDES DESTINATION
specifies a list of directories
which will be added to the INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES
target property of the <targets>
when exported by the
install(EXPORT)
command. If a relative path is
specified, it is treated as relative to the $<INSTALL_PREFIX>
.
The PRIVATE_HEADER
, PUBLIC_HEADER
, and RESOURCE
arguments
cause subsequent properties to be applied to installing a FRAMEWORK
shared library target’s associated files on non-Apple platforms. Rules
defined by these arguments are ignored on Apple platforms because the
associated files are installed into the appropriate locations inside
the framework folder. See documentation of the
PRIVATE_HEADER
, PUBLIC_HEADER
, and
RESOURCE
target properties for details.
Either NAMELINK_ONLY
or NAMELINK_SKIP
may be specified as a
LIBRARY
option. On some platforms a versioned shared library
has a symbolic link such as:
lib<name>.so -> lib<name>.so.1
where lib<name>.so.1
is the soname of the library and lib<name>.so
is a “namelink” allowing linkers to find the library when given
-l<name>
. The NAMELINK_ONLY
option causes installation of only the
namelink when a library target is installed. The NAMELINK_SKIP
option
causes installation of library files other than the namelink when a
library target is installed. When neither option is given both
portions are installed. On platforms where versioned shared libraries
do not have namelinks or when a library is not versioned the
NAMELINK_SKIP
option installs the library and the NAMELINK_ONLY
option installs nothing. See the VERSION
and
SOVERSION
target properties for details on creating versioned
shared libraries.
One or more groups of properties may be specified in a single call to
the TARGETS
form of this command. A target may be installed more than
once to different locations. Consider hypothetical targets myExe
,
mySharedLib
, and myStaticLib
. The code:
install(TARGETS myExe mySharedLib myStaticLib
RUNTIME DESTINATION bin
LIBRARY DESTINATION lib
ARCHIVE DESTINATION lib/static)
install(TARGETS mySharedLib DESTINATION /some/full/path)
will install myExe
to <prefix>/bin
and myStaticLib
to
<prefix>/lib/static
. On non-DLL platforms mySharedLib
will be
installed to <prefix>/lib
and /some/full/path
. On DLL platforms
the mySharedLib
DLL will be installed to <prefix>/bin
and
/some/full/path
and its import library will be installed to
<prefix>/lib/static
and /some/full/path
.
The EXPORT
option associates the installed target files with an
export called <export-name>
. It must appear before any RUNTIME
,
LIBRARY
, or ARCHIVE
options. To actually install the export
file itself, call install(EXPORT)
, documented below.
Installing a target with the EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL
target property
set to TRUE
has undefined behavior.
Installing Files¶
install(<FILES|PROGRAMS> files... DESTINATION <dir>
[PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[COMPONENT <component>]
[RENAME <name>] [OPTIONAL])
The FILES
form specifies rules for installing files for a project.
File names given as relative paths are interpreted with respect to the
current source directory. Files installed by this form are by default
given permissions OWNER_WRITE
, OWNER_READ
, GROUP_READ
, and
WORLD_READ
if no PERMISSIONS
argument is given.
The PROGRAMS
form is identical to the FILES
form except that the
default permissions for the installed file also include OWNER_EXECUTE
,
GROUP_EXECUTE
, and WORLD_EXECUTE
. This form is intended to install
programs that are not targets, such as shell scripts. Use the TARGETS
form to install targets built within the project.
The list of files...
given to FILES
or PROGRAMS
may use
“generator expressions” with the syntax $<...>
. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7)
manual for available expressions.
However, if any item begins in a generator expression it must evaluate
to a full path.
Installing Directories¶
install(DIRECTORY dirs... DESTINATION <dir>
[FILE_PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[USE_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS] [OPTIONAL] [MESSAGE_NEVER]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[COMPONENT <component>] [FILES_MATCHING]
[[PATTERN <pattern> | REGEX <regex>]
[EXCLUDE] [PERMISSIONS permissions...]] [...])
The DIRECTORY
form installs contents of one or more directories to a
given destination. The directory structure is copied verbatim to the
destination. The last component of each directory name is appended to
the destination directory but a trailing slash may be used to avoid
this because it leaves the last component empty. Directory names
given as relative paths are interpreted with respect to the current
source directory. If no input directory names are given the
destination directory will be created but nothing will be installed
into it. The FILE_PERMISSIONS
and DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS
options
specify permissions given to files and directories in the destination.
If USE_SOURCE_PERMISSIONS
is specified and FILE_PERMISSIONS
is not,
file permissions will be copied from the source directory structure.
If no permissions are specified files will be given the default
permissions specified in the FILES
form of the command, and the
directories will be given the default permissions specified in the
PROGRAMS
form of the command.
The MESSAGE_NEVER
option disables file installation status output.
Installation of directories may be controlled with fine granularity
using the PATTERN
or REGEX
options. These “match” options specify a
globbing pattern or regular expression to match directories or files
encountered within input directories. They may be used to apply
certain options (see below) to a subset of the files and directories
encountered. The full path to each input file or directory (with
forward slashes) is matched against the expression. A PATTERN
will
match only complete file names: the portion of the full path matching
the pattern must occur at the end of the file name and be preceded by
a slash. A REGEX
will match any portion of the full path but it may
use /
and $
to simulate the PATTERN
behavior. By default all
files and directories are installed whether or not they are matched.
The FILES_MATCHING
option may be given before the first match option
to disable installation of files (but not directories) not matched by
any expression. For example, the code
install(DIRECTORY src/ DESTINATION include/myproj
FILES_MATCHING PATTERN "*.h")
will extract and install header files from a source tree.
Some options may follow a PATTERN
or REGEX
expression and are applied
only to files or directories matching them. The EXCLUDE
option will
skip the matched file or directory. The PERMISSIONS
option overrides
the permissions setting for the matched file or directory. For
example the code
install(DIRECTORY icons scripts/ DESTINATION share/myproj
PATTERN "CVS" EXCLUDE
PATTERN "scripts/*"
PERMISSIONS OWNER_EXECUTE OWNER_WRITE OWNER_READ
GROUP_EXECUTE GROUP_READ)
will install the icons
directory to share/myproj/icons
and the
scripts
directory to share/myproj
. The icons will get default
file permissions, the scripts will be given specific permissions, and any
CVS
directories will be excluded.
Custom Installation Logic¶
install([[SCRIPT <file>] [CODE <code>]]
[COMPONENT <component>] [...])
The SCRIPT
form will invoke the given CMake script files during
installation. If the script file name is a relative path it will be
interpreted with respect to the current source directory. The CODE
form will invoke the given CMake code during installation. Code is
specified as a single argument inside a double-quoted string. For
example, the code
install(CODE "MESSAGE(\"Sample install message.\")")
will print a message during installation.
Installing Exports¶
install(EXPORT <export-name> DESTINATION <dir>
[NAMESPACE <namespace>] [FILE <name>.cmake]
[PERMISSIONS permissions...]
[CONFIGURATIONS [Debug|Release|...]]
[EXPORT_LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES]
[COMPONENT <component>])
The EXPORT
form generates and installs a CMake file containing code to
import targets from the installation tree into another project.
Target installations are associated with the export <export-name>
using the EXPORT
option of the install(TARGETS)
signature
documented above. The NAMESPACE
option will prepend <namespace>
to
the target names as they are written to the import file. By default
the generated file will be called <export-name>.cmake
but the FILE
option may be used to specify a different name. The value given to
the FILE
option must be a file name with the .cmake
extension.
If a CONFIGURATIONS
option is given then the file will only be installed
when one of the named configurations is installed. Additionally, the
generated import file will reference only the matching target
configurations. The EXPORT_LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES
keyword, if
present, causes the contents of the properties matching
(IMPORTED_)?LINK_INTERFACE_LIBRARIES(_<CONFIG>)?
to be exported, when
policy CMP0022
is NEW
. If a COMPONENT
option is
specified that does not match that given to the targets associated with
<export-name>
the behavior is undefined. If a library target is
included in the export but a target to which it links is not included
the behavior is unspecified.
The EXPORT
form is useful to help outside projects use targets built
and installed by the current project. For example, the code
install(TARGETS myexe EXPORT myproj DESTINATION bin)
install(EXPORT myproj NAMESPACE mp_ DESTINATION lib/myproj)
will install the executable myexe to <prefix>/bin
and code to import
it in the file <prefix>/lib/myproj/myproj.cmake
. An outside project
may load this file with the include command and reference the myexe
executable from the installation tree using the imported target name
mp_myexe
as if the target were built in its own tree.
Note
This command supercedes the install_targets()
command and
the PRE_INSTALL_SCRIPT
and POST_INSTALL_SCRIPT
target properties. It also replaces the FILES
forms of the
install_files()
and install_programs()
commands.
The processing order of these install rules relative to
those generated by install_targets()
,
install_files()
, and install_programs()
commands
is not defined.