Step 11: Adding Export Configuration¶
During Installing and Testing
of the tutorial we added the
ability for CMake to install the library and headers of the project. During
Packaging an Installer
we added the ability to package up
this information so it could be distributed to other people.
The next step is to add the necessary information so that other CMake projects can use our project, be it from a build directory, a local install or when packaged.
The first step is to update our install(TARGETS)
commands to not
only specify a DESTINATION
but also an EXPORT
. The EXPORT
keyword
generates a CMake file containing code to import all targets listed in the
install command from the installation tree. So let's go ahead and explicitly
EXPORT
the MathFunctions
library by updating the install
command
in MathFunctions/CMakeLists.txt
to look like:
set(installable_libs MathFunctions tutorial_compiler_flags)
if(TARGET SqrtLibrary)
list(APPEND installable_libs SqrtLibrary)
endif()
install(TARGETS ${installable_libs}
EXPORT MathFunctionsTargets
DESTINATION lib)
# install include headers
install(FILES MathFunctions.h DESTINATION include)
Now that we have MathFunctions
being exported, we also need to explicitly
install the generated MathFunctionsTargets.cmake
file. This is done by
adding the following to the bottom of the top-level CMakeLists.txt
:
install(EXPORT MathFunctionsTargets
FILE MathFunctionsTargets.cmake
DESTINATION lib/cmake/MathFunctions
)
At this point you should try and run CMake. If everything is setup properly you will see that CMake will generate an error that looks like:
Target "MathFunctions" INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES property contains
path:
"/Users/robert/Documents/CMakeClass/Tutorial/Step11/MathFunctions"
which is prefixed in the source directory.
What CMake is trying to say is that during generating the export information
it will export a path that is intrinsically tied to the current machine and
will not be valid on other machines. The solution to this is to update the
MathFunctions
target_include_directories()
to understand that it
needs different INTERFACE
locations when being used from within the build
directory and from an install / package. This means converting the
target_include_directories()
call for MathFunctions
to look like:
target_include_directories(MathFunctions
INTERFACE
$<BUILD_INTERFACE:${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}>
$<INSTALL_INTERFACE:include>
)
Once this has been updated, we can re-run CMake and verify that it doesn't warn anymore.
At this point, we have CMake properly packaging the target information that is
required but we will still need to generate a MathFunctionsConfig.cmake
so
that the CMake find_package()
command can find our project. So let's go
ahead and add a new file to the top-level of the project called
Config.cmake.in
with the following contents:
@PACKAGE_INIT@
include ( "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/MathFunctionsTargets.cmake" )
Then, to properly configure and install that file, add the following to the
bottom of the top-level CMakeLists.txt
:
install(EXPORT MathFunctionsTargets
FILE MathFunctionsTargets.cmake
DESTINATION lib/cmake/MathFunctions
)
include(CMakePackageConfigHelpers)
Next, we execute the configure_package_config_file()
. This command
will configure a provided file but with a few specific differences from the
standard configure_file()
way.
To properly utilize this function, the input file should have a single line
with the text @PACKAGE_INIT@
in addition to the content that is desired.
That variable will be replaced with a block of code which turns set values into
relative paths. These values which are new can be referenced by the same name
but prepended with a PACKAGE_
prefix.
install(EXPORT MathFunctionsTargets
FILE MathFunctionsTargets.cmake
DESTINATION lib/cmake/MathFunctions
)
include(CMakePackageConfigHelpers)
# generate the config file that includes the exports
configure_package_config_file(${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/Config.cmake.in
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MathFunctionsConfig.cmake"
INSTALL_DESTINATION "lib/cmake/MathFunctions"
NO_SET_AND_CHECK_MACRO
NO_CHECK_REQUIRED_COMPONENTS_MACRO
)
The write_basic_package_version_file()
is next. This command writes
a file which is used by find_package()
, documenting the version and
compatibility of the desired package. Here, we use the Tutorial_VERSION_*
variables and say that it is compatible with AnyNewerVersion
, which
denotes that this version or any higher one are compatible with the requested
version.
write_basic_package_version_file(
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MathFunctionsConfigVersion.cmake"
VERSION "${Tutorial_VERSION_MAJOR}.${Tutorial_VERSION_MINOR}"
COMPATIBILITY AnyNewerVersion
)
Finally, set both generated files to be installed:
install(FILES
${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MathFunctionsConfig.cmake
${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MathFunctionsConfigVersion.cmake
DESTINATION lib/cmake/MathFunctions
)
At this point, we have generated a relocatable CMake Configuration for our
project that can be used after the project has been installed or packaged. If
we want our project to also be used from a build directory we only have to add
the following to the bottom of the top level CMakeLists.txt
:
export(EXPORT MathFunctionsTargets
FILE "${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/MathFunctionsTargets.cmake"
)
With this export call we now generate a MathFunctionsTargets.cmake
, allowing the
configured MathFunctionsConfig.cmake
in the build directory to be used by
other projects, without needing it to be installed.